BACKGROUND: Female veterans are at risk for stress-related physical disorders given unique environmental stress factors, high rates of trauma exposure and a heightened physiologic stress response. There is a need to identify modifiable risk factors which may help minimize the emergence and impact of veteran illness. RESEARCH QUESTION: The present study investigated the contributions of posttraumatic stress symptoms, maladaptive repetitive thought (MRT), depression, childhood trauma and health behaviors (sleep, alcohol use and smoking) to physical disease as operationalized by immune-mediated inflammatory disease occurrence and related functional disability. METHOD: Female Reserve or National Guard veterans (N = 643) enrolled in a parent study conducted through the Iowa City Veteran's Affairs Hospital completed a one-time computer-assisted telephone interview. The current study examined self-report measures of posttraumatic stress symptoms, MRT, depression, childhood trauma, smoking, alcohol use, sleep, inflammatory disease incidence and physical functioning. RESULTS: Proposed models of primary hypotheses were tested using structural equation modeling. Results indicated that both physical disease and functional decline were greater in veterans reporting a history of trauma. Physical disease was associated with greater depression and childhood trauma but lower levels of alcohol use after accounting for covariates. Unexpectedly, greater MRT was associated with less physical disease, although it was only related to disease when depression was included as a covariate. Reduced sleep was linked with greater disease but only when depression was not included in the model, and depression was found to fully mediate the relationship between sleep and physical disease. Smoking and the interaction between posttraumatic stress symptoms and MRT were generally unrelated to physical disease in this sample. CONCLUSIONS: Results of this study are consistent with the hypothesis that physical disorders and related functional decline are greater in trauma-exposed individuals and that depression, childhood trauma, repetitive thought and alcohol use have independent associations with physical disease. This study offers support for further research and interventions which address these relationships to protect female veteran health.
Dissertation
Immune-spectrum disease among female veterans: relations with posttraumatic stress disorder and maladaptive repetitive thought
University of Iowa
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
Spring 2013
DOI: 10.17077/etd.9wam6b4r
Free to read and download, Open Access
Abstract
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Immune-spectrum disease among female veterans: relations with posttraumatic stress disorder and maladaptive repetitive thought
- Creators
- Elizabeth Ann Mullen-Houser - University of Iowa
- Contributors
- Susan K. Lutgendorf (Advisor)Erika Lawrence (Committee Member)James Marchman (Committee Member)Anne Sadler (Committee Member)Lisa Segre (Committee Member)Mark Vander Weg (Committee Member)
- Resource Type
- Dissertation
- Degree Awarded
- Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
- Degree in
- Psychology
- Date degree season
- Spring 2013
- Publisher
- University of Iowa
- DOI
- 10.17077/etd.9wam6b4r
- Number of pages
- ix, 130 pages
- Copyright
- Copyright 2013 Elizabeth Ann Mullen-Houser
- Language
- English
- Description illustrations
- illustrations
- Description bibliographic
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 89-110).
- Academic Unit
- Psychological and Brain Sciences
- Record Identifier
- 9983776828002771
Metrics
719 File views/ downloads
268 Record Views