Anxiety Sensitivity, Finding the Body, and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Suicide-Bereaved Treatment-Seeking Adults

Simin Ghahghahi, Matthew J. Cordova,Josef I. Ruzek,Bruce Bongar

PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA-THEORY RESEARCH PRACTICE AND POLICY(2024)

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摘要
Objective: Those bereaved by suicide are at greater risk of prolonged distress compared to those bereaved by other modes of death. Trauma- and emotion-related factors may increase this vulnerability. Finding the body of the deceased may intensify postsuicide distress. Anxiety sensitivity, fear of one's anxiety-related symptoms, has been positively associated with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in other trauma populations but has not been studied in the suicide bereaved. Method: This study examined the relationships among finding the body, anxiety sensitivity, and PTSD in a treatment-seeking, suicide-bereaved sample (N = 50). Pretreatment baseline data on demographics, the Anxiety Sensitivity Index, and the PTSD Checklist were analyzed. Results: Younger age (r = -.31, p = .03), being a person of color (r = -.32, p = .02), and fewer days since the loss (r = -.30, p = .03) were associated with greater PTSD. Controlling for age, race, and days since the loss, PTSD was unrelated to finding the body, F(1, 45) = 0.01, p = .92, but was positively associated with anxiety sensitivity (pr = .32, p = .03). In simultaneous regression analyses, age, race, days since the loss, finding the body, and anxiety sensitivity accounted for 33% of the variance in PTSD, F(2, 44) = 4.29, p = .003; anxiety sensitivity was the only significant predictor of PTSD symptoms (beta = .36, t = 2.35, p = .02). Conclusions: Anxiety sensitivity has important implications for the development and maintenance of PTSD in the suicide bereaved and should be assessed and targeted in suicide postvention.
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关键词
posttraumatic stress disorder,suicide,bereavement,anxiety sensitivity
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