Reserve Component

Gender Differences in Combat-Related Stressors and Their Association with Postdeployment Mental Health in a Nationally Representative Sample of U.S. OEF/OIF Veterans

Though the broader literature suggests that women may be more vulnerable to the effects of trauma exposure, most available studies on combat trauma have relied on samples in which women's combat exposure is limited and analyses that do not directly address gender differences in associations

2011
Vogt, D.
Vaughn, R.
Glickman, M. E.
Schultz, M., Drainoni, M.-L.
Elwy, R.
Eisent, S.

Gender Differences in Combat-Related Stressors and Their Association with Postdeployment Mental Health in a Nationally Representative Sample of U.S. OEF/OIF Veterans

Researchers evaluated gender differences in a variety of combat-related stress dimensions and associated consequences for postdeployment mental health in a representative sample of female and male U.S. Veterans who had returned from deployment to Afghanistan or Iraq within the previous year.

2011
Vogt, D.
Vaughn, R.
Glickman, M. E.
Schultz, M., Drainoni, M.-L.
Elwy, R.
Eisent, S.

Examining the Factor Structure of PTSD Between Male and Female Veterans in Primary Care

Researchers assessed possible gender differences between two prevailing posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) models – the emotional numbing (e.g., re-experiencing, avoidance, emotional numbing and arousal) and dysphoria (e.g., re-experiencing, avoidance, dysphoria and arousal) models – in order t

2012
Hall, B. J.
Elhai, J. D.
Grubaugh, A.
Tuerk, P.
Magruder, K.