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Patterns of acute stress disorder in a sample of blast-injured military service members: A latent profile analysis

Authors :
Richard A. Bryant
Casey L Straud
Chelsea McMahon
John C. Moring
Stacey Young-McCaughan
Cynthia L. Lancaster
Willie J. Hale
William C. Isler
Alan L. Peterson
Jose Lara-Ruiz
Monty T. Baker
Jim Mintz
Brian A Moore
Source :
Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy. 15:255-264
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Psychological Association (APA), 2023.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The primary aims of this study were to identify latent profiles of acute stress disorder (ASD) symptoms and to evaluate postconcussive symptom differences across the identified profiles as measured by the Acute Stress Disorder Scale and the Military Acute Concussion Evaluation, respectively. METHOD Participants (N = 315) in the current study were predominantly active-duty (75.0%), enlisted (97.8%) males (97.4%) serving in the U.S. Army (87.8%). Approximately, half of the sample reported being married or engaged (51.1%) and was on average 25.94 (SD = 6.31) years old. Participants were referred to the Air Force Theater Hospital, 332nd Air Expeditionary Wing, Joint Base Balad, Iraq, to be evaluated as part of routine clinical assessment for neurocognitive and psychological symptoms following exposure to a blast. RESULTS A 3-profile solution was identified as the most parsimonious and best-fitting model based on statistical model fit indices. Blast injured service members in Profile 3 had greater ASD total and subscale severity compared to the other 2 subgroups, with effect size estimates largely differing by hyperarousal and reexperiencing symptoms. Furthermore, Profiles 2 and 3 were more likely to demonstrate postconcussive symptoms compared to Profile 1. CONCLUSIONS Findings provide novel information on heterogenous ASD symptom profiles during the acute phase following a blast injury and highlight the relationship between psychological and physical symptoms. Classification of blast-injured service members may help identify at-risk individuals who would benefit from further clinical care and mitigate long-term psychological and neurocognitive issues. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

Details

ISSN :
1942969X and 19429681
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....990cdb783af7ad074aba8a48bf330996