AimTo examine relationships among combat exposure, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms, depression, suicidality, nicotine dependence, and religiosity in Croatian veterans.MethodsThis cross-sectional study used Combat Exposure Scale (CES) to quantify the stressor severity, PTSD Checklist 5 (PCL) to quantify PTSD severity, Duke University Religion Index to quantify religiosity, Montgomery Asberg (MADRS) and Hamilton Depression (HAM-D) rating scales to measure depression/suicidality, and Fagerstrom Test for Nicotine Dependence to assess nicotine dependence. Zero-order correlations, cluster analysis, multivariate regression, and mediation models were used for data analysis.ResultsOf 69 patients included, 71% met “high religiosity” criteria and 29% had moderate/high nicotine dependence. PTSD was severe (median PCL 71), depression was mild/moderate (median MADRS 19, HAM-D 14), while suicidality was mild. A subset of patients was identified with more severe PTSD/depression/suicidality and nicotine dependence (all P < 0.001). Two “chains” of direct and indirect independent associations were detected. Higher CES was associated with higher level of re-experiencing and, through re-experiencing, with higher negativity and hyperarousal. It also showed “downstream” division into two arms, one including a direct and indirect association with higher depression and lower probability of high religiosity, and the other including associations with higher suicidality and lower probability of high nicotine dependence.ConclusionsPsychopathology, religiosity, and nicotine dependence are intertwined in a complex way not detectable by simple direct associations. Heavy smoking might be a marker of severe PTSD psychopathology, while spirituality might be targeted in attempts of its alleviation.Oxford Centre for Evidence-based Medicine level of evidence: 3
Epidemiologija psihičkih poremećaja djece i adolescenata predstavlja važno područje u praćenju morbiditeta i planiranju zdravstvene zaštite ove populacije, kao i kapaciteta multimodalnog pristupa. Puno je manje istraživanja u tom području, nego u istom području kod odraslih. Malobrojna istraživanja upućuju na trend povećanja morbiditeta, a aktualna situacija pandemije COVID-19 predstavlja dodatni rizik.
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