Publication: Does the Repressor Coping Style Predict Lower Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms?
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Date
2011
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Association of Military Surgeons of the U.S.
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Citation
McNally, Richard J., John P. Hatch, Elizabeth M. Cedillos, Cynthia A. Luethcke, Monty T. Baker, Alan L. Peterson, and Brett T. Litz. 2011. Does the repressor coping style predict lower posttraumatic stress symptoms? Military Medicine 176(7): 752-756.
Research Data
Abstract
We tested whether a continuous measure of repressor coping style predicted lower posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms in 122 health care professionals serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom. Zero-order correlational analyses indicated that predeployment repressor coping scores negatively predicted postdeployment PTSD symptoms, \(r_s = -0.29, p = 0.001\), whereas predeployment Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC) scores did not predict postdeployment PTSD symptoms, \(r_s = -0.13, p = 0.14\). However, predeployment trait anxiety was chiefly responsible for the association between repressor coping and PTSD symptom severity, \(r_s = 0.38, p = 0.001\). Four percent of the subjects qualified for a probable PTSD diagnosis. Although service members with relatively higher PTSD scores had lower repressor coping scores than did the other subjects, their level of predeployment anxiety was chiefly responsible for this relationship. Knowing someone's predeployment level of trait anxiety permits better prediction of PTSD symptoms among trauma-exposed service members than does knowing his or her level of repressive coping.
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Keywords
repressive coping, PTSD, resilience, combat
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