Post-traumatic stress disorder and depression are uniquely associated with disability and life dissatisfaction in post-9/11 veterans
暂无分享,去创建一个
W. Milberg | R. McGlinchey | J. Fonda | C. Fortier | J. P. Bernstein | Alyssa Currao | Sahra Kim | J. Bernstein
[1] G. Manley,et al. Satisfaction with life following mild traumatic brain injury: A TRACK-TBI Study. , 2020, Journal of neurotrauma.
[2] K. Phan,et al. Impact of Perceived Social Support on Mental Health, Quality of Life, and Disability in Post–9/11 U.S. Military Veterans , 2020, Armed Forces & Society.
[3] Francesca C. Fortenbaugh,et al. The Impact of Common Psychiatric and Behavioral Comorbidities on Functional Disability Across Time and Individuals in Post-9/11 Veterans. , 2020, Journal of traumatic stress.
[4] J. Slaets,et al. Do psychosocial factors modify the negative association between disability and life satisfaction in old age? , 2019, PloS one.
[5] N. Kimbrel,et al. Using the World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 to assess disability in veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder , 2019, PloS one.
[6] Angelo Picardi,et al. The Relationship Between Satisfaction With Life and Depression Symptoms by Gender , 2019, Front. Psychiatry.
[7] A. Eakman,et al. Participation, Meaningful Activity, and Social Support Among U.S. Student Service Members/Veterans , 2019, OTJR : occupation, participation and health.
[8] H. Belanger,et al. Understanding the impact of mild traumatic brain injury on veteran service-connected disability: results from Chronic Effects of Neurotrauma Consortium , 2018, Brain injury.
[9] W. Milberg,et al. Feasibility of a Skills-Based Group Reintegration Workshop for OEF/OIF Veterans: STEP-Home , 2017, The Journal of head trauma rehabilitation.
[10] W. Milberg,et al. The Deployment Trauma Phenotype and Employment Status in Veterans of the Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan , 2017, The Journal of head trauma rehabilitation.
[11] W. Milberg,et al. A methodology for assessing deployment trauma and its consequences in OEF/OIF/OND veterans: The TRACTS longitudinal prospective cohort study , 2017, International journal of methods in psychiatric research.
[12] Jennifer M. Romesser,et al. Factors related to satisfaction with life in veterans with mild traumatic brain injury. , 2015, Rehabilitation psychology.
[13] William P. Milberg,et al. Deployment-related psychiatric and behavioral conditions and their association with functional disability in OEF/OIF/OND veterans. , 2015, Journal of traumatic stress.
[14] Loretta S. Malta,et al. Sleep disturbance, disability, and posttraumatic stress disorder in utility workers. , 2014, Journal of clinical psychology.
[15] Meghan E McDevitt-Murphy,et al. Impact of Combat and Social Support on PTSD and Alcohol Consumption in OEF/OIF Veterans , 2014, Military behavioral health.
[16] J. Ogden,et al. Adjusting to persistent post-concussive symptoms following mild traumatic brain injury and subsequent psycho-educational intervention: A qualitative analysis in military personnel , 2014, Brain injury.
[17] W. Milberg,et al. The Boston Assessment of Traumatic Brain Injury–Lifetime (BAT-L) Semistructured Interview: Evidence of Research Utility and Validity , 2014, The Journal of head trauma rehabilitation.
[18] T. Karatzias,et al. Life satisfaction in people with post-traumatic stress disorder , 2013, Journal of mental health.
[19] S. Shivpuri,et al. Satisfaction with life among veterans with spinal cord injuries completing multidisciplinary rehabilitation , 2013, Spinal Cord.
[20] A. Boonstra,et al. Life satisfaction in patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain and its predictors , 2013, Quality of Life Research.
[21] Ricardo Pagán-Rodríguez. Longitudinal Analysis of the Domains of Satisfaction Before and After Disability: Evidence from the German Socio-Economic Panel , 2012 .
[22] R. Kane,et al. Neuropsychological outcomes of mild traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic stress disorder and depression in Iraq-deployed US Army soldiers , 2012, British Journal of Psychiatry.
[23] S. Millis,et al. The “Miserable Minority” Following Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: Who Are They and do Meta-Analyses Hide Them? , 2012, The Clinical neuropsychologist.
[24] C. R. Cloninger,et al. Personality and the perception of health and happiness. , 2011, Journal of affective disorders.
[25] Michael E. Clark,et al. The “Postdeployment multi-symptom disorder”: An emerging syndrome in need of a new treatment paradigm. , 2010 .
[26] Todd E Bodner,et al. Social support and coping as moderators of perceived disability and posttraumatic stress levels among Vietnam theater veterans , 2010 .
[27] Shannon M. Kehle,et al. Early mental health treatment-seeking among U.S. National Guard soldiers deployed to Iraq. , 2010, Journal of traumatic stress.
[28] P. Schnurr,et al. Posttraumatic stress disorder and quality of life: extension of findings to veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. , 2009, Clinical psychology review.
[29] Ed Diener,et al. The Satisfaction With Life Scale and the emerging construct of life satisfaction , 2008 .
[30] B. Stålnacke. Community integration, social support and life satisfaction in relation to symptoms 3 years after mild traumatic brain injury , 2007, Brain injury.
[31] Tayyab Rashid,et al. Positive psychotherapy. , 2018, The American psychologist.
[32] D. G. Campbell,et al. Prevalence of Depression–PTSD Comorbidity: Implications for Clinical Practice Guidelines and Primary Care-based Interventions , 2007, Journal of General Internal Medicine.
[33] Christopher A. Pierce,et al. Life Satisfaction After Traumatic Brain Injury and the World Health Organization Model of Disability , 2006, American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation.
[34] Jeffrey Knight,et al. Deployment Risk and Resilience Inventory: A Collection of Measures for Studying Deployment-Related Experiences of Military Personnel and Veterans , 2006 .
[35] J. Henry,et al. The short-form version of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS-21): construct validity and normative data in a large non-clinical sample. , 2005, The British journal of clinical psychology.
[36] P. Azouvi,et al. Life satisfaction and disability after severe traumatic brain injury , 2005, Brain injury.
[37] G. Fairbrother,et al. Patient characteristics and quality of life among a sample of Australian chronic pain clinic attendees , 2004, Internal medicine journal.
[38] C. Shields,et al. Social support, depression, and functional disability in older adult primary-care patients. , 2004, The American journal of geriatric psychiatry : official journal of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry.
[39] D. Warden,et al. Post concussion syndrome , 2003, International review of psychiatry.
[40] L. Hansson. Quality of life in depression and anxiety , 2002 .
[41] G. Jean-Louis,et al. Sleep and quality of well-being. , 2000, Sleep.
[42] S. Haynes,et al. Development and preliminary validation of a brief broad-spectrum measure of trauma exposure: the Traumatic Life Events Questionnaire. , 2000, Psychological assessment.
[43] S. Saunders,et al. The relationship between depression, satisfaction with life, and social interest , 1999 .
[44] J. P. Maloney,et al. Social support: a conceptual analysis. , 1997, Journal of advanced nursing.
[45] L. Berkman. The role of social relations in health promotion. , 1995, Psychosomatic medicine.
[46] M. Fuhrer,et al. Life satisfaction of people with physical disabilities: Relationship to personal assistance, disability status, and handicap. , 1995 .
[47] D. Charney,et al. The development of a Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale , 1995, Journal of traumatic stress.
[48] Daniel J Buysse,et al. The Pittsburgh sleep quality index: A new instrument for psychiatric practice and research , 1989, Psychiatry Research.
[49] R. Larsen,et al. The Satisfaction with Life Scale , 1985, Journal of personality assessment.
[50] H A Skinner,et al. Reliability of alcohol use indices. The Lifetime Drinking History and the MAST. , 1982, Journal of studies on alcohol.
[51] R. Melzack. The McGill Pain Questionnaire: Major properties and scoring methods , 1975, PAIN.