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Proposed pathways to problematic drinking via post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms, emotion dysregulation, and dissociative tendencies following child/adolescent sexual abuse
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Citations
56
References
2016
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesSubstance UseProblematic DrinkingMental HealthTrauma In ChildVulnerability FactorsPsychologyAlcohol MisuseEarly Sexual AbuseChild/adolescent Sexual AbuseHealth SciencesPsychiatryChild AbuseAlcohol AbuseAdolescent DevelopmentPsychosocial ResearchAlcohol DependenceSubstance AbuseBrief Alcohol InterventionSexual AbuseAddictionDissociative TendenciesChild Sexual AbuseMedicinePsychopathologyPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
The relationship between early sexual abuse and college problem drinking was examined using an integration of the self-medication and vulnerability-stress models. Baseline survey data from parti-cipants (N = 213; 135 men and 78 college women) completing a mandated, brief alcohol intervention were utilized. Representative of the self-medication model, post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms mediated the early sexual abuse/problem drinking relationship. Two psychological vulnerability factors-emotion dysregulation and dissociative tendencies-were incorporated into self-medication findings via more advanced mediational models. Results highlighted that problem drinking increased as dissociative tendencies increased, and relations between the vulnerability factors and post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms were in an unexpected direction.
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