| Literature DB >> 26580844 |
Miranda Worthen1, Sujit D Rathod2, Gregory Cohen3, Laura Sampson4, Robert Ursano5, Robert Gifford5, Carol Fullerton5, Sandro Galea4, Jennifer Ahern6.
Abstract
Studies have found a stronger association between anger and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) severity in military populations than in nonmilitary populations. Two hypotheses have been proposed to explain this difference: Military populations are more prone to anger than nonmilitary populations, and traumas experienced on deployment create more anger than nondeployment traumas. To examine these hypotheses, we evaluated the association between anger and PTSD severity among never-deployed military service members with nondeployment traumas (n = 226) and deployed service members with deployment traumas (n = 594) using linear regression. We further examined these associations stratified by gender. Bivariate associations between anger and PTSD severity were similar for nondeployment and deployment events; however, gender modified this association. For men, the association for deployment events was stronger than for nondeployment events (β = .18, r = .53 vs. β = .16, r = .37, respectively), whereas the reverse was true for women (deployment: β = .20, r = .42 vs. nondeployment: β = .25, r = .65). Among men, findings supported the hypothesis that deployment traumas produce stronger associations between PTSD and anger and are inconsistent with hypothesized population differences. In women, however, there was not a clear fit with either hypothesis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26580844 DOI: 10.1002/jts.22050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Trauma Stress ISSN: 0894-9867