paratextJournal of Clinical PsychologyMar 7, 2006Closed access

Journal of Clinical Psychology

RGRosen, Gerald M.SMSageman, MarcLELoftus, Elizabeth
Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Objective

Posttrauma adjustment theories postulate that intense stressors violate people s beliefs about the world and perceived ability to achieve valued goals. Failure to make meaning from traumatic events exacerbates negative adjustment (e.g., PTSD), whereas success facilitates positive adjustment (e.g., stress–related growth). The current study aimed to test this model of direct and indirect effects among a sample of veterans. Method: Vietnam veterans (N = 130) completed assessment measures in an online survey format. Participants were largely male (91%) and Caucasian (93%) with a mean age of 61 years.

Results

Results supported basic model tenets, linking military stress severity to violations of beliefs and goals. In the final model, only goal violations carried indirect effects of severity on PTSD symptoms. Presence of and search for meaning carried a portion of the indirect effects between goal violations and both PTSD and stress–related growth.

Citation impact

2,669
total citations
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0
Citations per year

Authors

3
  • RG
    Rosen, Gerald M.Corresponding
  • SM
    Sageman, Marc
  • LE
    Loftus, Elizabeth

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Psychoanalysis
  • Applied psychology
  • Clinical psychology
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