| Literature DB >> 26989343 |
Huaiyu Zhang1, Delishia M Pittman2, Dorian A Lamis3, Nicole L Fischer4, Tomina J Schwenke5, Erika R Carr6, Sanjay Shah7, Nadine J Kaslow3.
Abstract
Childhood maltreatment places individuals, including African American women who are undereducated and economically disadvantaged, at risk for developing posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms. Participants were 192 African American women with a history in the prior year of both a suicide attempt and intimate partner violence (IPV) exposure. They were recruited from a public hospital that provides medical and mental health treatment to mostly low-income patients. A simple mediator model was used to examine if (1) existential well-being (sense of purpose) and/or religious well-being (relationship with God) mediated the link between childhood maltreatment and adult PTSD symptoms. Sequential multiple mediator models determined if physical and nonphysical IPV enhanced our understanding of the mediational association among the aforementioned variables. Findings suggest that existential well-being mediated the association between childhood maltreatment and adult PTSD symptoms in a simple mediator model, and existential well-being and recent nonphysical IPV served as sequential multiple mediators of this link. However, religious well-being and physical IPV were not significant mediators. Findings underscore the importance of enhancing existential well-being in the treatment of suicidal African American women with a history of childhood maltreatment and IPV.Entities:
Keywords: African American women; PTSD symptoms; existential well-being; religious well-being; spouse abuse
Year: 2015 PMID: 26989343 PMCID: PMC4792129 DOI: 10.1080/10926771.2015.1029182
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Aggress Maltreat Trauma ISSN: 1092-6771