학술논문

How Does Parenthood Moderate Paths Between Personal and Community Resources and Distress following Collective Trauma?
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Child & Family Studies. Apr2023, Vol. 32 Issue 4, p1148-1164. 17p. 2 Diagrams, 3 Charts.
Subject
*SOCIAL participation
*WAR
*EMOTIONAL trauma
*PSYCHOLOGY
*COMMUNITIES
*HELP-seeking behavior
*PARENTHOOD
*MEDICAL care use
*THEORY
*QUESTIONNAIRES
*SOMATOFORM disorders
*PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation
*PSYCHOLOGICAL distress
*TRUST
*ADOLESCENCE
Language
ISSN
1062-1024
Abstract
This study examines the moderating role of parenthood in associations between personal and community resources and psychological distress and somatization following collective exposure to security threats. The research questions were guided by Terror Management Theory that posits that parenthood involves heightened anxiety when children are in danger yet may also provide an existential resource that can reduce the individuals' distress. The study was conducted following the 2014 Israel-Gaza conflict and included 1014 Israelis. The participants completed a questionnaire assessing levels of trauma exposure (the predictors), sense of mastery (personal resource), engagement in community activities and trust in leaders (community resources), and psychological distress and somatization (the outcomes). Results indicated that parenthood moderated several associations between trauma exposure and personal and community resources as well as paths between these resources and psychological distress. In almost all these cases, these paths were statistically significant only among parents in two different directions. Parenthood was associated with more psychological distress through lower sense of mastery and greater engagement in community activities. On the other hand, parenthood was related to lower psychological distress through greater trust in local leaders. In addition, only among parents, lower levels of mastery mediated the association between trauma exposure and somatization. These results offer significant implications for practitioners. Although parents and non-parents can be similarly affected by trauma exposure with respect to trauma-related outcomes, the way to assist them to reduce these negative outcomes should be conducted through different paths involving their personal and community resources. Highlights: Parents and non-parents showed similar levels of trauma-related outcomes, but they arrived at them through different pathways. Only among parents, trauma exposure was associated with lower mastery, which in turn, was associated with higher trauma-related outcomes. Only among parents, long-term exposure to trauma was associated with greater levels of engagement in community activities. Only among parents, higher engagement in community activities was associated with higher psychological distress. Only among parents, trust in local leaders was associated with lower levels of psychological distress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]