Early and recent military and nonmilitary stressors associated with posttraumatic stress symptoms among military service members and their spouses

Author:

Sullivan Kathrine S.1ORCID,Park Yangjin2,Richardson Sabrina34,Cederbaum Julie5,Stander Valerie3,Jaccard James1

Affiliation:

1. Silver School of Social Work New York University New York New York USA

2. School of Social Work University of Texas at Arlington Arlington Texas USA

3. Center for Deployment Health Research Naval Health Research Center San Diego California USA

4. Leidos, Inc. San Diego California USA

5. Suzanne Dworak‐Peck School of Social Work University of Southern California, Los Angeles Los Angeles California USA

Abstract

AbstractDisparities in posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) have been observed among military service members (SMs) and spouses (SPs) compared to their civilian peers, but exposure to military stressors does not adequately explain observed differences. Using a stress process framework, this study considered the associations between early and recent military and nonmilitary stressors and PTSS among SMs and SPs. We analyzed data from 3,314 SM–SP dyads in the Millennium Cohort and Millennium Cohort Family Studies. Accounting for covariates, multiple linear regression and dominance analyses were employed to consider the effects of SM and SP childhood maltreatment, recent nonmilitary stressors (e.g., financial difficulties), and recent military stressors (e.g., deployment) on their own and their partner's self‐reported PTSS. For both SMs and SPs, childhood maltreatment was the strongest predictor of their own PTSS, followed by nonmilitary stressors. Couple crossover dynamics were evident as SP maltreatment and nonmilitary stressors significantly predicted SM PTSS, and SM maltreatment predicted SP PTSS. Maltreatment also multiplied the effects of SM, product term B = 0.92, p = .031, and SP, product term B = 0.75, p = .004, nonmilitary stressors. The findings emphasize the essential role of exposure to early adversity in understanding PTSS among SMs and SPs, as childhood maltreatment strongly predicted PTSS and exacerbated the effects of other stressors on PTSS. Providers should assess for early adversity among both SMs and SPs and consider the provision of services at the couple level given the potential for the transmission of stress within couples.

Funder

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology

Reference67 articles.

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3. The impact of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and combat exposure on mental health conditions among new post-9/11 veterans.

4. Asparouhov T. &Muthén B. O.(2022).Multiple imputation with Mplus.https://www.statmodel.com/download/Imputations7.pdf

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