Influence of Multiple Traumatic Event Types on Mental Health Outcomes: Does Count Matter?

被引:0
|
作者
Monica M. Gerber
Sheila B. Frankfurt
Ateka A. Contractor
Kelsey Oudshoorn
Paula Dranger
Lily A. Brown
机构
[1] University of North Texas,Department of Psychology
[2] VISN 17 Center of Excellence for Research on Returning War Veterans,Department of Psychiatry
[3] Texas A&M University,undefined
[4] Choices! Counseling Services,undefined
[5] Valparaiso University Graduate School and Counseling Center,undefined
[6] University of Pennsylvania,undefined
关键词
Lifetime traumatic experiences; PTSD; Depression; Distress tolerance; Dose-response theory; Stress-inoculation theory;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The experience of potentially traumatizing events (PTEs) may be associated with conflicting outcomes: individuals may experience greater psychological distress (dose-response theory), or individuals may become more resilient against repeated PTEs (stress-inoculation theory). With limited empirical data comparing these theories, we examined the relationships between the count of lifetime PTE types and psychological outcomes [posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, impaired distress tolerance] using linear and quadratic regressions. A linear relationship would support the dose-response theory, and a quadratic relationship would support the stress-inoculation theory. We also explored whether there was a threshold number of PTE types fostering resiliency before an increase of distressing outcomes. The sample included 123 (68.30% female) treatment-seeking patients at a community mental health center participating in a larger study (Contractor et al. in Psychiatry Research, 252, 252215–252222, 2017). Linear regression results indicated number of PTE types significantly predicted increasing PTSD and depression severity and distress tolerance difficulties. Quadratic regression model results were not significant. ROC analyses indicated exposure to at least 3.5 PTE types predicted PTSD with moderate accuracy. In conclusion, the dose-response theory was supported, with results indicating there may be a threshold count of lifetime PTE types (> 3) influencing traumatic stress outcomes.
引用
收藏
页码:645 / 654
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Influence of Multiple Traumatic Event Types on Mental Health Outcomes: Does Count Matter?
    Gerber, Monica M.
    Frankfurt, Sheila B.
    Contractor, Ateka A.
    Oudshoorn, Kelsey
    Dranger, Paula
    Brown, Lily A.
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND BEHAVIORAL ASSESSMENT, 2018, 40 (04) : 645 - 654
  • [2] The Influence of Multiple Community Level Traumatic Event Types on Mental Health Outcomes
    Grey, Ian
    Makki, Zeina
    Kahale, Christelle
    Habib, Rudy Abi
    Tohme, Pia
    PSYCHOLOGICAL REPORTS, 2023,
  • [3] Childhood adversities and mental health outcomes: Does the perception or age of the event matter?
    Negriff, Sonya
    DEVELOPMENT AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY, 2021, 33 (03) : 778 - 791
  • [4] Predictors and mental health outcomes of potentially traumatic event exposure
    Overstreet, Cassie
    Berenz, Erin C.
    Kendler, Kenneth S.
    Dick, Danielle M.
    Amstadter, Ananda B.
    PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH, 2017, 247 : 296 - 304
  • [5] Ingestion of multiple magnets: The count does matter
    Kim, Younglim
    Hong, Jeana
    Moon, Suk-Bae
    JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC SURGERY CASE REPORTS, 2014, 2 (03) : 130 - 132
  • [6] Does gender matter? Exploring mental health recovery court legal and health outcomes
    Catherine L Kothari
    Robert Butkiewicz
    Emily R Williams
    Caron Jacobson
    Diane S Morse
    Catherine Cerulli
    Health & Justice, 2 (1)
  • [7] Does trauma event type matter in the assessment of traumatic load?
    Conrad, Daniela
    Wilker, Sarah
    Pfeiffer, Anett
    Lingenfelder, Birke
    Ebalu, Tracie
    Lanzinger, Hartmut
    Elbert, Thomas
    Kolassa, Iris-Tatjana
    Kolassa, Stephan
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTRAUMATOLOGY, 2017, 8 (01)
  • [8] Does Mentoring Matter in the Mental Health Field?
    Lee, Cheryl D.
    Montiel, Eliette Del Carmen
    SOCIAL WORK IN MENTAL HEALTH, 2010, 8 (05) : 438 - 454
  • [9] The Moderating Role of Trauma Type on the Relationship Between Event Centrality of the Traumatic Experience and Mental Health Outcomes
    Wamser-Nanney, Rachel
    Howell, Kathryn H.
    Schwartz, Laura E.
    Hasselle, Amanda J.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA-THEORY RESEARCH PRACTICE AND POLICY, 2018, 10 (05) : 499 - 507
  • [10] Impact of COVID-19 on mental health: a traumatic event
    Houben-Wilke, Sarah
    Goertz, Yvonne
    Delbressine, Jeannet
    Vaes, Anouk
    Meys, Roy
    Machado, Felipe
    Van Herck, Maarten
    Burtin, Chris
    Posthuma, Rein
    Franssen, Frits
    Vijlbrief, Herman
    Spies, Yvonne
    Van ' T Hul, Alex
    Spruit, Martijn
    Janssen, Daisy
    Van Herck, Maarten
    EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2021, 58