Literature DB >> 30298916

PTSD and the influence of context: The self as a social mirror.

Stevan E Hobfoll1, Allison E Gaffey1,2, Linzy M Wagner1.   

Abstract

The principal accepted models of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are based on both memory processing and biological/brain changes occurring when one's life or well-being is threatened. It is our thesis that these models would be greatly informed by community studies indicating that PTSD is predicted to a greater extent by earlier life experience and experiences that occur distant from the threatening event. These findings suggest posttraumatic responding is best conceptualized through the lens of the self-in-context, as opposed to imprinting that results from a given event at a given time. Moreover, studies of non-Western populations often do not express trauma as PTSD, or at least not primarily as PTSD, which argues against specific neural or memory encoding processes, but rather for a more plastic neural process that is shaped by experience and how the self develops in its cultural context, as a product of a broad array of experiences. We posit that fear and emotional conditioning as well as the ways traumas are encoded in memory are only partial explanatory mechanisms for trauma responding, and that issues of safety and harm, which are long term and developmental, are the common and principal underpinnings of the occurrence of posttraumatic distress, including PTSD.
© 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  culture; posttraumatic stress disorder; resilience; resources; stress

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30298916     DOI: 10.1111/jopy.12439

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pers        ISSN: 0022-3506


  4 in total

1.  PTSD as a Moderator of the Relationship Between the Distribution of Personal Resources and Spiritual Change Among Participants of Hostilities in Ukraine.

Authors:  Iwona Niewiadomska; Krzysztof Jurek; Joanna Chwaszcz; Magdalena Korżyńska-Piętas; Tomasz Peciakowski
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2022-03-26

2.  The Mental Health Consequences of Hurricane Matthew on Haitian Children and Youth: An Exploratory Study.

Authors:  Priscilla Dass-Brailsford; Rebecca S Hage Thomley; Dipana Jain; E Sterling Jarrett
Journal:  J Child Adolesc Trauma       Date:  2021-10-23

3.  Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Antidepressant Use, and Hemorrhagic Stroke in Young Men and Women: A 13-Year Cohort Study.

Authors:  Allison E Gaffey; Lindsey Rosman; Matthew M Burg; Sally G Haskell; Cynthia A Brandt; Melissa Skanderson; James Dziura; Jason J Sico
Journal:  Stroke       Date:  2020-12-10       Impact factor: 7.914

4.  A Promotive Process of Resource Gain Against Harsh and Inconsistent Discipline in Mothers Coping With Breast Cancer: A Serial Mediation Model.

Authors:  Osnat Zamir; Gabriella Bentley; Yaliu He
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2022-06-16       Impact factor: 5.435

  4 in total

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