2010
DOI: 10.1002/jts.20520
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The impact of childhood abuse and combat‐related trauma on postdeployment adjustment

Abstract: This retrospective study examined the effects of childhood physical abuse (CPA) and combat-related trauma on postdeployment psychiatric symptoms in an outpatient clinical sample of 1,045 U.S. service members. The authors conducted hierarchical multiple regression analyses to examine the impact of CPA and combat-related trauma on alcohol use, anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms. Analyses revealed significant main effects for CPA and combat-related trauma on anxiety, depression… Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(52 citation statements)
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“…Several studies have found no increase in drinking related to stressful life events (Droomers, Schrijvers, Stronks, Van De Mheen, & Mackenbach, 1999;Robertson, Xu, & Stripling, 2010;Welte & Mirand, 1995), social anxiety (Eggleson, Woolaway-Bickel, & Schmidt, 2004;Ham & Hope, 2006;Tran, Haaga, & Chambless, 1997) and posttraumatic stress disorder (Boscarino et al, 2006;Breslau, Davis, & Schultz, 2003;Najdowski & Ullman, 2009), and there are also studies reporting no drinking increase in people who have suffered pain (Yokoyama et al, 2009), sexual victimization (Testa, Livingston, & Hoffman, 2007) and effects of military combat (Fritch, Mishkind, Reger, & Gahm, 2010). Workrelated stress has a particularly uncertain relationship with drinking; sometimes distressed employees drink more (Ahola et al, 2006;Bobak et al, 2005;Richman, Shinsako, Rospenda, Flaherty, & Freels, 2002) and sometimes they do not (Hodgins, Williams, & Munro, 2009;Kouvonen et al, 2005;Ng & Jeffery, 2003).…”
Section: Ijadr International Journal Of Alcohol and Drug Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several studies have found no increase in drinking related to stressful life events (Droomers, Schrijvers, Stronks, Van De Mheen, & Mackenbach, 1999;Robertson, Xu, & Stripling, 2010;Welte & Mirand, 1995), social anxiety (Eggleson, Woolaway-Bickel, & Schmidt, 2004;Ham & Hope, 2006;Tran, Haaga, & Chambless, 1997) and posttraumatic stress disorder (Boscarino et al, 2006;Breslau, Davis, & Schultz, 2003;Najdowski & Ullman, 2009), and there are also studies reporting no drinking increase in people who have suffered pain (Yokoyama et al, 2009), sexual victimization (Testa, Livingston, & Hoffman, 2007) and effects of military combat (Fritch, Mishkind, Reger, & Gahm, 2010). Workrelated stress has a particularly uncertain relationship with drinking; sometimes distressed employees drink more (Ahola et al, 2006;Bobak et al, 2005;Richman, Shinsako, Rospenda, Flaherty, & Freels, 2002) and sometimes they do not (Hodgins, Williams, & Munro, 2009;Kouvonen et al, 2005;Ng & Jeffery, 2003).…”
Section: Ijadr International Journal Of Alcohol and Drug Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Relatively little work examining cumulative trauma and the military has focused on the experiences of women, who tend to have more extensive histories of childhood trauma and higher rates of PTSD (see Sareen et al, 2013), and who are increasingly exposed to combat-related stressors in their formal work capacity as soldiers or other workers in war zones. For example, most of the studies cited above comprise samples of entirely or primarily men; the abovementioned sample of post-9/11 military was 78% male (Dedert et al, 2009) and the abovementioned study of OEF/OIF veterans was 86% male (Fritch et al, 2010).…”
Section: Study Aims and Specific Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, the mean age of the participants in the abovementioned OEF/OIF sample was 30.5 years (Fritch et al, 2010). We anticipated that combat exposure would account for unique variance above and beyond that of childhood and adulthood traumas.…”
Section: Study Aims and Specific Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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