OBJECTIVE: Following trauma exposure and PTSD, individuals with severe mental illness (SMI) frequently suffer a complex course of recovery complicated by reduced mental and physical health and increased substance abuse. The authors evaluated a theoretical PTSD-SMI model which theorizes that trauma, PTSD, depression, substance abuse, mental health, and physical health are interrelated and that PTSD mediates these relationships. METHOD: Participants were ethnoracially diverse individuals diagnosed with SMI (N=175) who were assessed for trauma exposure, severity of PTSD and depression, substance abuse, and overall mental and physical health functioning. Pearson's correlations were utilized to examine the relationships between study domains. The mediating effects of PTSD were assessed using regression coefficients and the Sobel test for mediation. RESULTS: A majority of participants with SMI (89%) reported trauma exposure and 41% reported meeting diagnostic criteria for PTSD. On average, participants were exposed to over four types of traumatic events. Trauma, severity of PTSD and depression, substance abuse, and overall mental and physical health functioning were significantly interrelated. PTSD partially mediated the relationships between trauma and severity of depression and between trauma and overall mental health; PTSD fully mediated the trauma and overall physical health relationship. DISCUSSION: Within an ethnoracially diverse SMI sample, trauma exposure and PTSD comorbidity were high and associated with severity of depression, substance abuse, overall mental health and physical health functioning. Supporting our theoretical PTSD-SMI model, PTSD mediated the adverse effects of trauma exposure on participants' current severity of depression and overall mental and physical health functioning. Copyright Â
OBJECTIVE: Following trauma exposure and PTSD, individuals with severe mental illness (SMI) frequently suffer a complex course of recovery complicated by reduced mental and physical health and increased substance abuse. The authors evaluated a theoretical PTSD-SMI model which theorizes that trauma, PTSD, depression, substance abuse, mental health, and physical health are interrelated and that PTSD mediates these relationships. METHOD:Participants were ethnoracially diverse individuals diagnosed with SMI (N=175) who were assessed for trauma exposure, severity of PTSD and depression, substance abuse, and overall mental and physical health functioning. Pearson's correlations were utilized to examine the relationships between study domains. The mediating effects of PTSD were assessed using regression coefficients and the Sobel test for mediation. RESULTS: A majority of participants with SMI (89%) reported trauma exposure and 41% reported meeting diagnostic criteria for PTSD. On average, participants were exposed to over four types of traumatic events. Trauma, severity of PTSD and depression, substance abuse, and overall mental and physical health functioning were significantly interrelated. PTSD partially mediated the relationships between trauma and severity of depression and between trauma and overall mental health; PTSD fully mediated the trauma and overall physical health relationship. DISCUSSION: Within an ethnoracially diverse SMI sample, trauma exposure and PTSD comorbidity were high and associated with severity of depression, substance abuse, overall mental health and physical health functioning. Supporting our theoretical PTSD-SMI model, PTSD mediated the adverse effects of trauma exposure on participants' current severity of depression and overall mental and physical health functioning. Copyright Â
Authors: Kim T Mueser; Susan R McGurk; Haiyi Xie; Elisa E Bolton; M Kay Jankowski; Weili Lu; Stanley D Rosenberg; Rosemarie Wolfe Journal: Psychiatry Res Date: 2017-10-06 Impact factor: 3.222
Authors: Jessica R Williams; Brian E McCabe; Lila de Tantillo; Kristin Levoy; Victoria Behar-Zusman Journal: Issues Ment Health Nurs Date: 2020-09-23 Impact factor: 1.835
Authors: Leila Allen; Polly-Anna Ashford; Ella Beeson; Sarah Byford; Jessica Chow; Tim Dalgleish; Andrea Danese; Jack Finn; Ben Goodall; Lauren Grainger; Matthew Hammond; Ayla Humphrey; Gerwyn Mahoney-Davies; Nicola Morant; Lee Shepstone; Erika Sims; Patrick Smith; Paul Stallard; Annie Swanepoel; David Trickey; Katie Trigg; Jon Wilson; Richard Meiser-Stedman Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2021-07-01 Impact factor: 2.692