Female Veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan Seeking Care from VA Specialized PTSD Programs: Comparison with Male Veterans and Female War Zone Veterans of Previous Eras

被引:33
|
作者
Fontana, Alan [1 ,2 ]
Rosenheck, Robert [2 ]
Desai, Rani [2 ]
机构
[1] VA Connecticut Healthcare Syst, NEPEC 182, NE Program Evaluat Ctr, West Haven, CT 06516 USA
[2] VA Connecticut Healthcare Syst, VA New England Mental Illness Res Educ & Clin Ctr, West Haven, CT 06516 USA
关键词
POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER; MENTAL-HEALTH-SERVICES; COMORBIDITY SURVEY REPLICATION; DSM-IV DISORDERS; WOMEN; ENVIRONMENT; PREVALENCE;
D O I
10.1089/jwh.2009.1389
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background: Differences in the characteristics and mental health needs of female veterans of the Iraq/Afghanistan war compared with those of veterans of other wars may have useful implications for VA program and treatment planning. Methods: Female veterans reporting service in the Iraq/Afghanistan war were compared with women reporting service in the Persian Gulf and Vietnam wars and to men reporting service in the Iraq/Afghanistan war. Subjects were drawn from VA administrative data on veterans who sought outpatient treatment from specialized posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) treatment programs. A series of analyses of covariance (ANCOVA) was used to control for program site and age. Results: In general, Iraq/Afghanistan and Persian Gulf women had less severe psychopathology and more social supports than did Vietnam women. In turn, Iraq/Afghanistan women had less severe psychopathology than Persian Gulf women and were exposed to less sexual and noncombat nonsexual trauma than their Persian Gulf counterparts. Notable differences were also found between female and male veterans of the Iraq/Afghanistan war. Women had fewer interpersonal and economic supports, had greater exposure to different types of trauma, and had different levels of diverse types of pathology than their male counterparts. Conclusions: There appear to be sufficient differences within women reporting service in different war eras and between women and men receiving treatment in VA specialized treatment programs for PTSD that consideration should be given to program planning and design efforts that address these differences in every program treating female veterans reporting war zone service.
引用
收藏
页码:751 / 757
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Comparison of outpatient health care utilization among returning women and men Veterans from Afghanistan and Iraq
    Mona Duggal
    Joseph L Goulet
    Julie Womack
    Kirsha Gordon
    Kristin Mattocks
    Sally G Haskell
    Amy C Justice
    Cynthia A Brandt
    BMC Health Services Research, 10
  • [42] Comparison of outpatient health care utilization among returning women and men Veterans from Afghanistan and Iraq
    Duggal, Mona
    Goulet, Joseph L.
    Womack, Julie
    Gordon, Kirsha
    Mattocks, Kristin
    Haskell, Sally G.
    Justice, Amy C.
    Brandt, Cynthia A.
    BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2010, 10
  • [43] Comparing the health status of male and female veterans who use VA health care: Results from the VA women's health project
    Skinner, K
    Sullivan, LM
    Tripp, TJ
    Kressin, NR
    Miller, DR
    Kazis, L
    Casey, V
    WOMEN & HEALTH, 1999, 29 (04) : 17 - 33
  • [44] Interest in Partner-Involved Services Among Veterans Seeking Mental Health Care From a VA PTSD Clinic
    Meis, Laura A.
    Schaaf, Kathryn Wilder
    Erbes, Christopher R.
    Polusny, Melissa A.
    Miron, Lynsey R.
    Schmitz, Theresa M.
    Nugent, Sean M.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA-THEORY RESEARCH PRACTICE AND POLICY, 2013, 5 (04) : 334 - 342
  • [45] ALTERNATIVE REPRESENTATIONS OF WAR ZONE STRESSORS - RELATIONSHIPS TO POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER IN MALE AND FEMALE VIETNAM VETERANS
    KING, DW
    KING, LD
    GUDANOWSKI, DM
    VREVEN, DL
    JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1995, 104 (01) : 184 - 196
  • [46] Male-to-Female Sexual Aggression Among Iraq, Afghanistan, and Vietnam Veterans: Co-Occurring Substance Abuse and Intimate Partner Aggression
    Teten, Andra L.
    Schumacher, Julie A.
    Bailey, Sara D.
    Kent, Thomas A.
    JOURNAL OF TRAUMATIC STRESS, 2009, 22 (04) : 307 - 311
  • [47] Prevalence of Central Nervous System Polypharmacy and Associations with Overdose and Suicide-Related Behaviors in Iraq and Afghanistan War Veterans in VA Care 2010–2011
    Collett G.A.
    Song K.
    Jaramillo C.A.
    Potter J.S.
    Finley E.P.
    Pugh M.J.
    Drugs - Real World Outcomes, 2016, 3 (1) : 45 - 52
  • [48] Understanding How Deployment Experiences Change Over Time: Comparison of Female and Male OEF/OIF and Gulf War Veterans
    Fox, Annie B.
    Walker, Brian E.
    Smith, Brian N.
    King, Daniel W.
    King, Lynda A.
    Vogt, Dawne
    PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA-THEORY RESEARCH PRACTICE AND POLICY, 2016, 8 (02) : 135 - 140
  • [49] The Effect of Enemy Combat Tactics on PTSD Prevalence Rates: A Comparison of Operation Iraqi Freedom Deployment Phases in a Sample of Male and Female Veterans
    Green, Jonathan D.
    Bovin, Michelle J.
    Erb, Sarah E.
    Lachowicz, Mark
    Gorman, Kaitlyn R.
    Rosen, Raymond C.
    Keane, Terence M.
    Marx, Brian P.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA-THEORY RESEARCH PRACTICE AND POLICY, 2016, 8 (05) : 634 - 640
  • [50] Posttraumatic stress disorder in a national sample of female and male Vietnam veterans. Risk factors, war-zone stressors, and resilience-recovery variables
    King, DW
    King, LA
    Foy, DW
    Keane, TM
    Fairbank, JA
    JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1999, 108 (01) : 164 - 170