| Literature DB >> 30521584 |
Eric D Wesselmann1, Dan Ispas1, Mark D Olson2, Mark E Swerdlik1, Natasha M Caudle1.
Abstract
Posttraumatic stress-negative psychological experiences as a result of traumatic stressors-can hinder military veterans' reintegration into society and cause various mental health problems. Veterans need quality social relationships to facilitate reintegration and to cope with posttraumatic stress and related mental health problems; discrimination or other forms of interpersonal rejection can exacerbate these veterans' problems. Ostracism (i.e., being ignored and excluded) is a painful and psychologically distressing experience that may be one factor that contributes to the problems of veterans who are dealing with posttraumatic stress. To our knowledge, this connection has yet to be tested empirically. Thus, we investigated the correlation between posttraumatic stress, perceived ostracism, and other theoretically relevant variables (i.e., mental health problems, perceived social support, psychological need satisfaction) in a sample of veterans who have had at least one deployment. Our results provide preliminary empirical evidence suggesting that perceived ostracism may contribute to veteran' deployment-related psychological problems. Veterans' perceived ostracism correlated with psychological problems (i.e., posttraumatic stress symptoms, anxiety and psychological distress), and it explained additional variance in posttraumatic stress symptoms above and beyond common predictors of these symptoms (i.e., deployment stress, perceived military and civilian-based social support). Finally, perceived ostracism emerged as the most important predictor of posttraumatic stress symptoms in a relative weights analysis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30521584 PMCID: PMC6283591 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0208438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Participant demographic information.
| Demographic Category | Response Option | Demographic Category | Response Option | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Have Children? | ||||
| Male | 103 | Yes | 90 | ||
| Female | 26 | No | 39 | ||
| Transgender | 0 | Number of Deployments | |||
| Prefer Not to Answer | 0 | 1 | 65 | ||
| Race | 2 | 41 | |||
| American Indian or Alaskan Native | 2 | 3 | 18 | ||
| Black or African-American | 4 | 4 | 3 | ||
| White | 107 | 5 | 0 | ||
| Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander | 0 | 6 or More | 2 | ||
| Asian | 2 | Highest Education Level | |||
| More Than One Race | 8 | No high school diploma | 0 | ||
| Other or Unknown | 3 | High school diploma | 5 | ||
| 3 | Some college | 39 | |||
| Hispanic or Latino(a)? | Associates Degree (AA) | 30 | |||
| Yes | 7 | Bachelors Degree (BA or BS) | 36 | ||
| No | 100 | Masters Degree | 16 | ||
| 22 | Doctoral Degree | 2 | |||
| Marital Status | “Other” (i.e., post baccalaureate) | 1 | |||
| Single | 23 | Veteran Status | |||
| Married/Legal Partnership | 90 | Active Duty | 52 | ||
| Divorced | 14 | Reserve | 57 | ||
| Separated | 1 | Retired Military | 5 | ||
| “Other” (i.e., engaged) | 1 | No Longer in the Military but Not Formally Retired | 15 |
Note: Total N = 129
Descriptive statistics, inter-correlation matrix, and scale reliabilities.
| Mean | SD | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Psychological Distress | 2.46 | 1.07 | ||||||||
| 2. Perceived Ostracism | 1.81 | 1.21 | .63 | |||||||
| 3. Basic Needs Satisfaction | 3.80 | .82 | -.73 | -.78 | ||||||
| 4. Trait Anxiety | 2.45 | 1.47 | .76 | .61 | -.73 | |||||
| 5. PTSD Symptoms | .90 | .84 | .73 | .65 | -.73 | .76 | ||||
| 6. Perceived Civilian-Based Social Support | 3.86 | .71 | -.53 | -.55 | .59 | -.46 | -.51 | |||
| 7. Deployment Stress | 2.56 | .92 | .26 | .25 | -.33 | .40 | .39 | -.18 | ||
| 8. Perceived Military-Based Social Support | 3.85 | .87 | -.46 | -.54 | .64 | -.46 | -.56 | .60 | -.28 |
*p < .05.
**p < .01.
***p < .001.
Ns = 125–128.
Incremental variance explained by perceived ostracism over deployment stress, perceived military support and civilian support.
| Step | Predictor variable | Β | Δ |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Deployment Stress | .30 | |
| 2 | Deployment Stress | .25 | |
| Perceived Ostracism | .41 | .10 |
†p = .078.
*p = .028.
**p = .001.
***p < .001.
Relative weight analysis.
| Predictor | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perceived Ostracism | Deployment Stress | Military Support | Civilian Support | |
| RRW | .23 | .08 | .12 | .10 |
| Rescaled RW | 42.41% | 15.64% | 23.47% | 18.48% |
Notes. R2 for the model = .53. RRW = raw relative weights. Rescaled RW = computed by dividing RRW by R2 in order to find the percentage of criterion variance attributable to each predictor.