Publication | Closed Access
Understanding acute psychological distress following natural disaster
294
Citations
24
References
1994
Year
Resilience (Structural Engineering)Sierra Madre EarthquakeNatural DisastersAcute Psychological DistressEducationMental HealthPsychologyResilience (Community Psychology)Dance MediaStressLos Angeles CountyPublic HealthStress ManagementPsychological DistressPsychiatryDisaster VulnerabilityMultilevel ModelingPsychosocial ResearchSocial StressDisaster ManagementDisaster ResearchMedicineDisaster Risk ReductionEmergency MedicinePost-traumatic Stress Disorder
Abstract A household probability sample of 229 adults was interviewed four to seven months after the Sierra Madre earthquake (June 28, 1991; Los Angeles County). The study predicted psychological distress from these variables: demographics, traumatic event history, low magnitude event history, earthquake related threat perceptions, and earthquake related resource loss. Based on the Conservation of Resources (COR) stress model, it was predicted that resource loss would be central in predicting psychological distress. Three major hypotheses were supported: (1) resource loss was positively associated with psychological distress; (2) resource loss predicted psychological distress when other predictors were statistically controlled; and (3) resource loss was associated with mild to moderate elevations in of psychological distress. The findings support COR stress theory. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
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