Publication | Closed Access
Psychological Adjustment, Coping, and Emotion Regulation as Predictors of Posttraumatic Growth
100
Citations
56
References
2004
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesPsychological AdjustmentPsychiatryEmotion RegulationPsychosocial ResearchPosttraumatic GrowthPost-traumatic Stress DisorderSocial StressTrauma RecoveryMental HealthMedicinePsychological ResiliencePsychosocial IssuePsychologyMaximal Trauma DistressCoping Behavior
Abstract The present study examined factors contributing to reported benefits of traumatic experiences or posttraumatic growth (PTG) in a college sample. Specifically, we examined dimensions typically associated with trauma recovery (i.e., psychological functioning, coping, emotion regulation) and features of the trauma (i.e., number and recency of traumatic events, average, and maximal distress). Participants (N= 193) completed standardized questionnaires measuring these constructs. Results indicated that active coping and subjective well-being independently contributed to PTG, but social desirability and symptom distress were independent of growth. These results were consistent with study expectations. Although not specifically predicted, maximal trauma distress also uniquely predicted PTG. Contrary to expectations, effective emotion regulation did not contribute to PTG.
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