Title of article :
Family cohesion and posttraumatic intrusion and avoidance
among war veterans: a 20-year longitudinal study
Author/Authors :
Gadi Zerach، نويسنده , , Zahava Solomon، نويسنده , , Danny Horesh، نويسنده , ,
Tsachi Ein-Dor، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
Background The bi-directional relationships between
combat-induced posttraumatic symptoms and family relations
are yet to be understood. The present study assesses
the longitudinal interrelationship of posttraumatic intrusion
and avoidance and family cohesion among 208 Israeli
combat veterans from the 1982 Lebanon War.
Methods Two groups of veterans were assessed with selfreport
questionnaires 1, 3 and 20 years after the war: a
combat stress reaction (CSR) group and a matched non-
CSR control group.
Results Latent Trajectories Modeling showed that veterans
of the CSR group reported higher intrusion and
avoidance than non-CSR veterans at all three points of
time. With time, there was a decline in these symptoms in
both groups, but the decline was more salient among the
CSR group. The latter also reported lower levels of family
cohesion. Furthermore, an incline in family cohesion levels
was found in both groups over the years. Most importantly,
Autoregressive Cross-Lagged Modeling among CSR and
non-CSR veterans revealed that CSR veterans’ posttraumatic
symptoms in 1983 predicted lower family cohesion
in 1985, and lower family cohesion, in turn, predicted
posttraumatic symptoms in 2002.
Conclusions The findings suggest that psychological
breakdown on the battlefield is a marker for future family
cohesion difficulties. Our results lend further support for
the bi-directional mutual effects of posttraumatic symptoms
and family cohesion over time
Keywords :
Posttraumatic symptoms CSR Familycohesion War Longitudinal study
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)