4.2 Article

The Impact of Discriminatory Stress on Changes in Posttraumatic Stress Severity at the Intersection of Race/Ethnicity and Gender

Journal

JOURNAL OF TRAUMA & DISSOCIATION
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages 170-187

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/15299732.2020.1869079

Keywords

Posttraumatic stress disorder; discrimination; race and ethnicity; gender; intersectionality

Funding

  1. Bob Woodruff Foundation
  2. Health Net Federal Services
  3. Heinz Endowments
  4. HJF
  5. Lockheed Martin Corporation
  6. May and Stanley Smith Charitable Trust
  7. National Endowment for the Humanities
  8. Northrop Grumman
  9. Prudential
  10. Robert R. McCormick Foundation
  11. Rumsfeld Foundation
  12. Schultz Family Foundation
  13. Walmart Foundation
  14. Wounded Warrior Project, Inc.
  15. Veterans Health Administration Health Services Research and Development Service

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This study examined the impact of discriminatory stress on changes in PTSD symptom severity among White, Black, and Hispanic/Latino/a/x veterans, with a focus on the interactions among race/ethnicity, gender, and discriminatory stress. The findings suggest that discriminatory stress affects PTSD severity differently for various ethnoracial/gender groups, with a stronger relationship observed in Black women.
Given the diversity of military veterans and growing evidence of ethnoracial disparities in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) within this population, elucidating the role of discrimination-related stress in contributing to these disparities is crucial. We examined the relative impact of discriminatory stress (i.e., due to race/ethnicity, religion, nationality, gender, sexual orientation, or physical appearance) on 6-month changes in PTSD symptom severity among trauma-exposed White (74%), Black (11%) and Hispanic/Latino/a/x (15%) veterans (17% female). PTSD symptoms were measured with the 8-item PTSD Checklist for DSM-5. A measure of the extent to which discrimination has caused stress for the respondent assessed discriminatory stress. Hierarchical regression analyses examined interactions among race/ethnicity, gender and discriminatory stress in predicting six-month changes in PTSD severity. Black and Hispanic/Latino/a/x veterans reported higher baseline PTSD severity and discriminatory stress than White veterans, with some variation by gender. Three-way interactions of race/ethnicity by discriminatory stress by gender were significant, controlling for income, education and age. The relationship between discriminatory stress and increases in PTSD severity was significantly stronger for Black women compared with Black men and did not differ between White men and women. There was also a stronger relationship between discriminatory stress and increases in PTSD severity for Hispanic/Latino/x men as compared to Black men. These findings suggest that discriminatory stress impacts PTSD severity differentially for various ethnoracial/gender groups and highlight the value of applying an intersectional framework that accounts for the synergistic connections among multiple identities to future screening, intervention, and research efforts.

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