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Journal Article

Citation

Fontana A, Rosenheck RA. Psychol. Aging 1994; 9(1): 27-33.

Affiliation

Veterans Affairs Northeast Program Evaluation Center, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, West Haven, Connecticut 06516.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1994, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8185865

Abstract

Three hypotheses regarding symptoms of war-related posttraumatic stress disorder and general psychiatric distress were tested: that symptoms are more severe the more severe the traumatic exposure, regardless of the war in question; that symptoms are less severe the older the veterans' age; and that symptom levels differ across sociocultural cohorts. A total of 5,138 war zone veterans who were seeking treatment from specialized Veterans Affairs outpatient clinical teams made up the sample: 320 World War II, 199 Korean War, and 4,619 Vietnam War veterans. All hypotheses were supported significantly. The similarity of relationships between traumatic exposure and symptoms across wars testifies to the generality of these experiences. Furthermore, the results suggest the operation of significant effects due both to aging and to cohort differences in sociocultural attitudes toward the stigma of mental illness and the popularity of the wars.


Language: en

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