PTSD symptoms, life events, and unit cohesion in U.S. soldiers: baseline findings from the neurocognition deployment health study.

Relationships among a modifiable situational factor (unit cohesion), prior stressful life events, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms were assessed in 1,579 U.S. Army soldiers with no history of contemporary war zone deployment. It was predicted that unit cohesion would attenuate the dose-response relationship between past stressor exposures and PTSD symptoms at relatively moderate levels of exposure. Consistent with this hypothesis, regression analysis revealed that life experiences and unit cohesion strongly and independently predicted PTSD symptoms, and that unit cohesion attenuated the impact of life experiences on PTSD. Some military personnel reported significant predeployment, stress-related symptoms. These symptoms may serve as vulnerabilities that could potentially be activated by subsequent war-zone deployment. Higher predeployment unit cohesion levels appear to ameliorate such symptoms, potentially lessening future vulnerability.

[1]  Timothy Heeren,et al.  Neuropsychological outcomes of army personnel following deployment to the Iraq war. , 2006, JAMA.

[2]  P. Bliese Social Climates: Drivers of Soldier Well-Being and Resilience. , 2006 .

[3]  Lynda A. King,et al.  Prewar factors in combat-related posttraumatic stress disorder: structural equation modeling with a national sample of female and male Vietnam veterans. , 1996, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[4]  R. Kane,et al.  The Neurocognition Deployment Health Study: a prospective cohort study of Army Soldiers. , 2006, Military medicine.

[5]  M. Friedman Acknowledging the psychiatric cost of war. , 2004, The New England journal of medicine.

[6]  R. Yehuda,et al.  Risk Factors and the Adversity‐Stress Model , 2008 .

[7]  George W. Brown Meaning, measurement, and stress of life events. , 1974 .

[8]  S. Folkman,et al.  Appraisals of controllability and coping in caregivers and HIV+ men: testing the goodness-of-fit hypothesis. , 2001, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[9]  Paul D. Bliese,et al.  Being Both Too Liberal and Too Conservative: The Perils of Treating Grouped Data as though They Were Independent , 2004 .

[10]  R. Stretch,et al.  Effects of premilitary and military trauma on the development of post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms in female and male active duty soldiers. , 1998, Military medicine.

[11]  J. Shay Achilles in Vietnam: Combat Trauma and the Undoing of Character , 1994 .

[12]  R. Kessler,et al.  Posttraumatic stress disorder in the National Comorbidity Survey. , 1995, Archives of general psychiatry.

[13]  S. West,et al.  Multiple Regression: Testing and Interpreting Interactions. , 1994 .

[14]  S E Hobfoll,et al.  Effects of social support and battle intensity on loneliness and breakdown during combat. , 1986, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[15]  Z. Solomon,et al.  Life Events and Combat-Related Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: The Intervening Role of Locus of Control and Social Support , 1990 .

[16]  D. King,et al.  Relationship of War-Zone Coping Strategies to Long-Term General Life Adjustment Among Vietnam Veterans: Combat Exposure as a Moderator Variable , 2002 .

[17]  L. Hourani,et al.  Psychosocial and health correlates of types of traumatic event exposures among U.S. military personnel. , 2003, Military medicine.

[18]  James Griffith,et al.  Relating Cohesion to Stress, Strain, Disintegration, and Performance: An Organizing Framework , 1999 .

[19]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Social support and psychopathology in the war zone. , 1997, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[20]  E. Blanchard,et al.  Psychometric properties of the PTSD Checklist (PCL). , 1996, Behaviour research and therapy.

[21]  C. Hoge,et al.  Combat duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, mental health problems and barriers to care. , 2004, U.S. Army Medical Department journal.

[22]  M. Koss,et al.  Prevalence of premilitary adult sexual victimization and aggression in a Navy recruit sample. , 1998, Military medicine.

[23]  R. McNally,et al.  Prewar, War-Zone, and Postwar Predictors of Posttraumatic Stress in Female Vietnam Veteran Health Care Providers , 2004 .

[24]  J. Vasterling,et al.  Epidemiological and Methodological Issues in Neuropsychological Research on PTSD. , 2005 .

[25]  Jeffrey Knight,et al.  Deployment Risk and Resilience Inventory: A Collection of Measures for Studying Deployment-Related Experiences of Military Personnel and Veterans , 2006 .

[26]  B. Dohrenwend,et al.  The Psychological Risks of Vietnam for U.S. Veterans: A Revisit with New Data and Methods , 2006, Science.

[27]  James Griffith,et al.  Multilevel Analysis of Cohesion's Relation to Stress, Well-Being, Identification, Disintegration, and Perceived Combat Readiness , 2002 .

[28]  Charles W Hoge,et al.  Mental health problems, use of mental health services, and attrition from military service after returning from deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan. , 2006, JAMA.

[29]  D. Weiss,et al.  Predictors of posttraumatic stress disorder and symptoms in adults: a meta-analysis. , 2003, Psychological bulletin.

[30]  Jacob Cohen,et al.  Applied multiple regression/correlation analysis for the behavioral sciences , 1979 .

[31]  Lynda A. King,et al.  Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale: Evidence for the Dimensionality of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. , 1998 .

[32]  Dc Washington Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Ed. , 1994 .

[33]  Joan Harman,et al.  A Quantitative Integration of the Military Cohesion Literature , 1999 .

[34]  Robert S. Barcikowski,et al.  Statistical Power with Group Mean as the Unit of Analysis , 1981 .