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Journal Article

Citation

Yang H, Wang L, Cao C, Cao X, Fang R, Zhang J, Elhai JD. Eur. J. Psychotraumatol. 2017; 8(1): e1272789.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, and Department of Psychiatry, University of Toledo , Toledo , OH , USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, The Author(s), Publisher Co-action Publishing)

DOI

10.1080/20008198.2016.1272789

PMID

28326161

PMCID

PMC5328312

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A large number of empirical studies pertaining to the latent dimensions of DSM-5 PTSD symptoms have accumulated. However, there is still a lack of studies specific to youths.

OBJECTIVE: This study sought to investigate the latent dimensions of DSM-5 PTSD symptoms in a sample of adolescents exposed to an explosion accident.

METHOD: Participants were 836 students (407 females and 428 males). Self-reported measures including the PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 and the anxiety and depression subscales of the 21-item Depression Anxiety Stress Scale were administered to participants. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was implemented to test competing factor models.

RESULTS: A seven-factor model composed of intrusion, avoidance, negative affect, anhedonia, externalizing behaviours, anxious arousal and dysphoric arousal factors emerged as the best fitting model, and PTSD's factors displayed distinguishable correlations with external measures of anxiety and depression.

CONCLUSIONS: The findings provide and extend empirical evidence supporting the newly refined seven-factor hybrid model of DSM-5 PTSD symptoms, and have implications for further trauma-related clinical practice and research.


Language: en

Keywords

China; Confirmatory factor analysis; DSM-5; PTSD; adolescents; man-made disaster

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