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Postdisaster stress in the United States and Mexico: A cross-cultural test of the multicriterion conceptual model of posttraumatic stress disorder.
86
Citations
21
References
2001
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesCross-cultural TestEducationMental HealthUnited StatesPsychologySocial SciencesStressComorbid Psychiatric DisorderPublic HealthPostdisaster StressStress ManagementPsychiatryMultilevel ModelingCivilian Mississippi ScaleSocial StressPsychosocial ResearchPsychosocial IssueMexican SamplesHurricanes PaulinaCultural PsychiatryPsychopathologyPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
Data on symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were collected 6 months after Hurricanes Paulina (N = 200; Mexico) and Andrew (non-Hispanic n = 270; United States) using the Revised Civilian Mississippi Scale. A 4-factor measurement model that represented the accepted multicriterion conceptualization of PTSD fit the data of the U.S. and Mexican samples equally well. The 4 factors of Intrusion, Avoidance, Numbing, and Arousal correlated significantly and equivalently with severity of trauma in each sample. A single construct explained much of the covariance of the symptom factors in each sample. However, modeling PTSD as a unidimensional construct masked differences between samples in symptom severity. With severity of trauma controlled, the Mexican sample was higher in Intrusion and Avoidance, whereas the U.S. sample was higher in Arousal. The results suggest that PTSD is a meaningful construct to study in Latin American societies.
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