Literature DB >> 23526678

Gender differences in posttraumatic stress symptoms among OEF/OIF veterans: an item response theory analysis.

Matthew W King1, Amy E Street, Jaimie L Gradus, Dawne S Vogt, Patricia A Resick.   

Abstract

Establishing whether men and women tend to express different symptoms of posttraumatic stress in reaction to trauma is important for both etiological research and the design of assessment instruments. Use of item response theory (IRT) can reveal how symptom reporting varies by gender and help determine if estimates of symptom severity for men and women are equally reliable. We analyzed responses to the PTSD Checklist (PCL) from 2,341 U.S. military veterans (51% female) who completed deployments in support of operations in Afghanistan and Iraq (Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom [OEF/OIF]), and tested for differential item functioning by gender with an IRT-based approach. Among men and women with the same overall posttraumatic stress severity, women tended to report more frequent concentration difficulties and distress from reminders whereas men tended to report more frequent nightmares, emotional numbing, and hypervigilance. These item-level gender differences were small (on average d = 0.05), however, and had little impact on PCL measurement precision or expected total scores. For practical purposes, men's and women's severity estimates had similar reliability. This provides evidence that men and women veterans demonstrate largely similar profiles of posttraumatic stress symptoms following exposure to military-related stressors, and some theoretical perspectives suggest this may hold in other traumatized populations. Published 2013. This article is a US Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23526678     DOI: 10.1002/jts.21802

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma Stress        ISSN: 0894-9867


  19 in total

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Review 3.  Sleep and Dreaming in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.

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5.  PTSD symptom profiles among Louisiana women affected by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill: A latent profile analysis.

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6.  DSM-5 Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptom Structure in Disaster-Exposed Adolescents: Stability across Gender and Relation to Behavioral Problems.

Authors:  Xing Cao; Li Wang; Chengqi Cao; Jianxin Zhang; Jon D Elhai
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7.  The differential diagnostic accuracy of the PTSD Checklist among men versus women in a community sample.

Authors:  Kelly S Parker-Guilbert; Feea R Leifker; Lauren M Sippel; Amy D Marshall
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8.  Female rats are resistant to developing the depressive phenotype induced by maternal separation stress.

Authors:  J J Dimatelis; I M Vermeulen; K Bugarith; D J Stein; V A Russell
Journal:  Metab Brain Dis       Date:  2015-09-07       Impact factor: 3.584

Review 9.  Sex differences in stress reactivity in arousal and attention systems.

Authors:  Debra A Bangasser; Samantha R Eck; Evelyn Ordoñes Sanchez
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2018-06-29       Impact factor: 7.853

10.  Exploring the moderating role of gender in the relation between emotional expressivity and posttraumatic stress disorder symptom severity among Black trauma-exposed college students at a historically Black university.

Authors:  Nazaret C Suazo; Miranda E Reyes; Ateka A Contractor; Emmanuel D Thomas; Nicole H Weiss
Journal:  J Clin Psychol       Date:  2021-07-28
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