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Journal Article

Citation

Booth BM, Davis TD, Cheney AM, Mengeling MA, Torner JC, Sadler AG. Psychosom. Med. 2012; 74(9): 916-924.

Affiliation

HSR&D Center for Mental Healthcare Outcomes and Research (B.M.B, A.M.C.), Central Arkansas Healthcare System, Little Rock, AR; Department of Psychiatry (B.M.B, A.M.C.), University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR; Greater Los Angeles Veterans Healthcare System-West Los Angeles VAMC (T.D.D.), Los Angeles, CA; Comprehensive Access and Delivery Research and Evaluation (M.A.M., A.G.S.), Iowa City VA Medical Center, Iowa City, IA; Department of Epidemiology (J.C.T.), College of Public Health, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, American Psychosomatic Society, Publisher Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/PSY.0b013e31827078e2

PMID

23071345

Abstract

Objective The aim of this study was to determine whether current physical health status in female veterans is associated with rape during military service and same-sex partnership.

Methods Retrospective computer-assisted telephone interviews of 1004 Midwestern US female veterans identified from Veterans Affairs electronic records were conducted. Data included rape history including rape in military, sex partnership history, demographics, and medical history including chronic pain, mental health (depression and posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD]), and the physical health component of the Short-Form 12-item interview (PCS-12).

Results Physical health in this sample was lower than norm values [PCS-12: mean (standard deviation) = 43 [12]; norm: mean (standard deviation) = 50 [10]). Fifty-one percent of the participants reported rape in their lifetime, 25% reported rape in military, 11% reported history of women as sex partners, and 71% reported history of chronic pain. Multiple regression analysis indicated that physical health (PCS-12) was associated with chronic pain history (β = -.40, p < .001), rape in military (β = -.09, p = .002), and current PTSD (β = .07, p = .03), adjusting for demographic data. Mediational analysis indicated that chronic pain history significantly mediated relationships of women who have sex with women, childhood rape, PTSD, depression, and current substance use disorder with PCS-12.

Conclusions Both rape and sex partnership are adversely associated with lower physical functioning in female veterans. Clinicians evaluating the physical health of this population should therefore consider obtaining detailed sexual histories, and a multidisciplinary team is needed to address mental health issues in female veterans.


Language: en

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