The prevalence of lifetime exposure to combat or violence, natural disaster, or major accident involving injuries or fatalities was examined in two population-based samples of active-duty U.S. military personnel. The psychosocial and health effects of types of exposure (witness only, victim/survivor, relief worker), gender differences, and social support were also evaluated. The lifetime exposure to one or more traumatic events was 65 percent; the most prevalent trauma for men was witnessing a major accident, and for women, witnessing a natural disaster. In multivariate analyses, victims of any traumatic event were at twice the risk of having two or more physical and mental health problems than nonexposed controls; male witnesses had the highest risk for current.
Psychosocial and Health Correlates of Types of Traumatic Event Exposures among U.S. Military Personnel
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Summary
Citation
Hourani, L. L., Yuan, H., & Bray, R. M. (2003). Psychosocial and health correlates of types of traumatic event exposures among US military personnel (No. NHRC-00-43). NAVAL HEALTH RESEARCH CENTER SAN DIEGO CA.