Attributional negativity bias and acute stress disorder symptoms mediate the association between trauma history and future posttraumatic stress disorder

Author:

Webb E. Kate12ORCID,Timmer‐Murillo Sydney C.3,Huggins Ashley A.4,Tomas Carissa W.5ORCID,deRoon‐Cassini Terri A.3ORCID,Larson Christine L.6

Affiliation:

1. Division of Depression and Anxiety McLean Hospital Belmont Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Psychiatry Harvard Medical School Massachusetts USA

3. Division of Trauma & Acute Care Surgery, Department of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

4. Brain Imaging and Analysis Center Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

5. Division of Epidemiology and Social Sciences, Institute for Health Equity Medical College of Wisconsin Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

6. Department of Psychology University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

Abstract

AbstractIndividuals who have experienced more trauma throughout their life have a heightened risk of developing posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following injury. Although trauma history cannot be retroactively modified, identifying the mechanism(s) by which preinjury life events influence future PTSD symptoms may help clinicians mitigate the detrimental effects of past adversity. The current study proposed attributional negativity bias, the tendency to perceive stimuli/events as negative, as a potential intermediary in PTSD development. We hypothesized an association between trauma history and PTSD symptom severity following a new index trauma via heightened negativity bias and acute stress disorder (ASD) symptoms. Recent trauma survivors (N =189, 55.5% women, 58.7% African American/Black) completed assessments of ASD, negativity bias, and lifetime trauma 2‐weeks postinjury; PTSD symptoms were assessed 6 months later. A parallel mediation model was tested with bootstrapping (10,000 resamples). Both negativity bias, Path b1: β = −.24, t(187) = −2.88, p = .004, and ASD symptoms, Path b2: β = .30, t(187) = 3.71, p < .001, fully mediated the association between trauma history and 6‐month PTSD symptoms, full model: F(6, 182) = 10.95, p < .001, R 2= .27; Path c’: β = .04, t(187) = 0.54, p = .587. These results suggest that negativity bias may reflect an individual cognitive difference that can be further activated by acute trauma. Moreover, negativity bias may be an important, modifiable treatment target, and interventions addressing both acute symptoms and negativity bias in the early posttrauma period may weaken the link between trauma history and new‐onset PTSD.

Funder

Medical College of Wisconsin

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

National Institute of Mental Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology

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