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Journal Article

Citation

Jordan AH, Eisen E, Bolton E, Nash WP, Litz BT. Psychol. Trauma 2017; 9(6): 627-634.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, American Psychological Association)

DOI

10.1037/tra0000249

PMID

28068142

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We investigated whether potentially morally injurious events (PMIEs) during a combat deployment may lead to PTSD through distinct pathways from danger-based events. We also examined the prevalence of perpetration-based PMIEs, during which service members behaved in ways that violated their own moral values, and betrayal-based PMIEs, during which personal moral expectations were violated by trusted others.

METHOD: Using a sample of 867 active duty Marines from a single infantry battalion that engaged in heavy ground combat while deployed to Afghanistan, a structural equation model was built to examine the relationships between perpetration- and betrayal-based PMIEs, combat experiences, and peritraumatic dissociation reported at 1 month postdeployment, and guilt/shame, anger, and PTSD symptoms reported at 8 months postdeployment.

RESULTS: The relationship between betrayal-based PMIEs and PTSD was mediated by anger (β =.14). There was marginal evidence of mediation of the relationship between perpetration-based PMIEs and PTSD by shame and guilt (β =.09), and of the relationship between danger-based combat events and PTSD by peritraumatic dissociation (β =.08). No significant direct relationships were found between any of these 3 types of events and subsequent PTSD. Perceived perpetration and betrayal accounted for PTSD symptoms above and beyond combat exposure. Over a third of the sample reported experiencing perpetration- or betrayal-based PMIEs.

CONCLUSIONS: The associations of perpetration and betrayal with PTSD, controlling for danger-based combat events, highlight the limitations of conceptualizations and treatments of PTSD based on fear or helplessness as sole etiologic factors. (PsycINFO Database Record

(c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).


Language: en

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