Dimensions of Religiosity and PTSD Symptom Clusters in US Veterans and Active Duty Military

被引:0
作者
Harold G. Koenig
Nagy A. Youssef
Donna Ames
Rev. John P. Oliver
Fred Volk
Ellen J. Teng
Terrence D. Hill
机构
[1] Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center,Departments of Medicine and Psychiatry
[2] Duke University Medical Center,Department of Medicine
[3] King Abdulaziz University,Department of Psychiatry, Medical College of Georgia
[4] Ningxia Medical University,Department of Counselor Education and Family Studies, School of Behavioral Sciences
[5] Augusta University,School of Sociology
[6] Charlie Norwood VA Medical Center,undefined
[7] VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System,undefined
[8] University of California - Los Angeles,undefined
[9] Chaplain Services,undefined
[10] Duke University Hospital,undefined
[11] Liberty University,undefined
[12] Baylor College of Medicine and Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center,undefined
[13] University of Arizona,undefined
来源
Journal of Religion and Health | 2019年 / 58卷
关键词
Religiosity; Post-traumatic stress disorder; Symptom clusters; Veterans; Active Duty Military;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We examined multiple dimensions of religiosity and their relationship to the four DSM-5 PTSD symptom clusters among US Veterans and Active Duty Military (ADM), hypothesizing that religiosity would be most strongly inversely related to negative cognitions/emotions (Criterion D symptoms) and less strongly to neurobiologically based symptom clusters (B, C, and E). This cross-sectional multisite study involved 591 Veterans and ADM from across the southern USA. Inclusion criteria were having served in a combat theater and the presence of PTSD symptoms. Measures of religious beliefs/practices, social involvement, and PTSD symptoms were administered, and bivariate and multivariate analyses were conducted in the overall sample, and in exploratory analyses, in the sample stratified by race (White, Black, and Hispanic). In the overall sample, multivariate analyses revealed that the only PTSD symptom cluster inversely related to religiosity was Criterion D, and only to organizational (b = − 0.08, P = 0.028) and cognitive/intrinsic religiosity (b = − 0.06, P = 0.049), relationships that were fully explained by social factors. Religious struggles, in contrast, were positively related to all four symptom clusters. Inverse relationships with Criterion D symptoms were particularly strong in Blacks, in whom inverse relationships were also present with Criterion E symptoms. In contrast, only positive relationships with PTSD symptom clusters were found in Hispanics, and no relationships (except for religious struggles) were present in Whites. As hypothesized, the inverse relationship between religious involvement and PTSD symptoms in Veterans and ADM was strongest (though modest) for Criterion D negative cognitions/emotions, especially in Blacks.
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页码:805 / 822
页数:17
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