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Influence of hardiness, avoidance coping, and combat exposure on depression in returning war veterans: A moderated-mediation study

APA Citation:

Bartone, P. T., & Homish, G. G. (2020). Influence of hardiness, avoidance coping, and combat exposure on depression in returning war veterans: A moderated-mediation study. Journal of Affective Disorders, 265, 511–518. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2020.01.127

Focus:

Deployment
Mental health
Trauma

Branch of Service:

Army
Marine Corps
Multiple branches

Military Affiliation:

Guard

Subject Affiliation:

Guard/Reserve member

Population:

Adulthood (18 yrs & older)
Young adulthood (18 - 29 yrs)
Thirties (30 - 39 yrs)
Middle age (40 - 64 yrs)

Methodology:

Quantitative Study

Authors:

Bartone, Paul T., Homish, Gregory G.

Abstract:

Background Depression is a serious problem among military personnel returning from combat deployments, and is related to a range of adverse outcomes including alcohol and drug abuse, family violence and suicide. The present study explores how psychological hardiness, avoidance coping, and combat stress exposure may influence depression in U.S. Army soldiers returning from a one-year deployment to Afghanistan. Methods National Guard soldiers (N = 357) completed surveys upon their return to home station, including measures of hardiness, avoidance coping, combat exposure, and depression. Path analysis with ordinary least squares regression procedures (PROCESS program; Hayes, 2013) were applied to test for mediation and moderation effects among the study variables. Results: Results showed a pattern of moderated-mediation. In the mediation model, hardiness had a significant effect on depression, which was mediated by avoidance coping. Soldiers low in hardiness reported using more avoidance coping strategies, which was related to increased depression. This effect in turn was seen to be conditional, moderated by level of combat exposure such that the effect was stronger at high levels of exposure. Limitations Data are cross-sectional, and the sample consisted of male soldiers only, which may limit generalizability. Conclusions Depression and related problems among combat veterans may be diminished by applying training programs and policies aimed at increasing hardiness attitudes and active coping skills.

Publisher/Sponsoring Organization:

Elsevier Science

Publication Type:

Article

Author Affiliation:

National Defense University, PTB
University at Buffalo School of Public Health, GGH

Keywords:

depression, hardiness, avoidance coping, combat stress, moderated-mediation

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