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Journal Article

Citation

Kim J, Seok JH, Choi K, Jon DI, Hong HJ, Hong N, Lee E. J. Korean Med. Sci. 2015; 30(11): 1667-1674.

Affiliation

Gyeonggi Northern Region Military Manpower Office, Uijeongbu, Korea.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Korean Academy of Medical Science)

DOI

10.3346/jkms.2015.30.11.1667

PMID

26539013

Abstract

Early life stress (ELS) may induce long-lasting psychological complications in adulthood. The protective role of resilience against the development of psychopathology is also important. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationships among ELS, resilience, depression, anxiety, and aggression in young adults. Four hundred sixty-one army inductees gave written informed consent and participated in this study. We assessed psychopathology using the Korea Military Personality Test, ELS using the Childhood Abuse Experience Scale, and resilience with the resilience scale. Analyses of variance, correlation analyses, and hierarchical multiple linear regression analyses were conducted for statistical analyses. The regression model explained 35.8%, 41.0%, and 23.3% of the total variance in the depression, anxiety, and aggression indices, respectively. We can find that even though ELS experience is positively associated with depression, anxiety, and aggression, resilience may have significant attenuating effect against the ELS effect on severity of these psychopathologies. Emotion regulation showed the most beneficial effect among resilience factors on reducing severity of psychopathologies. To improve mental health for young adults, ELS assessment and resilience enhancement program should be considered.


Language: en

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