학술논문

Moral injury appraisals and dissociation: Associations in a sample of trauma-exposed community members.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Trauma & Dissociation. Oct-Dec2023, Vol. 24 Issue 5, p692-711. 20p. 7 Charts, 4 Graphs.
Subject
*RESEARCH
*ETHICS
*DISSOCIATIVE disorders
*POST-traumatic stress disorder
*COMMUNITIES
*SEX distribution
*RESEARCH funding
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*STATISTICAL correlation
*AFRICAN Americans
Language
ISSN
1529-9732
Abstract
Appraisal of trauma is a critical factor in the development of impairing post-traumatic stress symptoms, such as dissociation. Individuals may appraise trauma as morally injurious (i.e., moral injury exposure [MIE]) and experience subsequent moral distress related to this exposure (i.e., moral injury distress [MID]). To date, however, investigation into the relations between moral injury appraisals and dissociation has been limited, particularly within community populations. This study investigated MIE and MID in relation to six facets of dissociation (disengagement, depersonalization, derealization, memory disturbances, emotional constriction, identity dissociation) in a sample of trauma-exposed community members (n = 177, 58.2% Black, 89.3% female) recruited from a public hospital and/or community advertisements. Participants completed measures assessing trauma exposure, MIE, MID, dissociation, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms. Partial correlation analyses revealed that after controlling for PTSD symptoms, MIE was correlated with disengagement, r =.23, p ≤.025, and depersonalization, r =.25, p ≤.001, and MID was correlated with depersonalization, r =.19, p ≤.025. Sex moderated each association, with stronger associations observed for female participants. Findings suggest that moral injury appraisals are linked to more severe dissociative symptoms among female civilians, and as such, may need to be specifically targeted in empirically supported treatments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]