
%0 Journal Article
%T Protective factors, coping appraisals, and social barriers predict mental health following community violence: a prospective test of social cognitive theory
%J Journal of Traumatic Stress
%D 2017
%A Smith, Andrew J.
%A Felix, Erika D.
%A Benight, Charles C.
%A Jones, Russell T.
%V 30
%N 3
%P 245-253
%X This study tested social cognitive theory of posttraumatic adaptation in the context of mass violence, hypothesizing that pre-event protective factors (general self-efficacy and perceived social support) would reduce posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) and depression severity through boosting post-event coping self-efficacy appraisals (mediator). We qualified hypotheses by predicting that post-event social support barriers would disrupt (moderate) the health-promoting indirect effects of pre-event protective factors. With a prospective longitudinal sample, we employed path models with bootstrapping resampling to test hypotheses. Participants included 70 university students (71.4% female; 40.0% White; 34.3% Asian; 14.3% Hispanic) enrolled during a mass violence event who completed surveys one year pre-event and 5-6 months post-event. <br><br>RESULTS revealed significant large effects in predicting coping self-efficacy (mastery model, R(2) =.34; enabling model, R(2) =.36), PTSS (mastery model, R(2) =.35; enabling model, R(2) =.41), and depression severity (mastery model, R(2) =.43; enabling model, R(2) =.46). Overall findings supported study hypotheses, showing that at low levels of post-event social support barriers, pre-event protective factors reduced distress severity through boosting coping self-efficacy. However, as post-event social support barriers increased, the indirect, distress-reducing effects of pre-event protective factors were reduced to nonsignificance. Study implications focus on preventative and responsive intervention.<br><br>Copyright © 2017 International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>
%G en
%I John Wiley and Sons
%@ 0894-9867
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jts.22197