A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECTS OF VIETNAM COMBAT PARTICIPATION ON ADULT PSYCHO-SOCIAL FUNCTIONING AMONG ARMY AND AIR FORCE RESERVE PERSONNEL (POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER)

A comparative study of 210 Vietnam Era veterans who are currently serving in the U.S. military Reserves. Two major groups--Vietnam combat veterans and Vietnam Era veterans with no combat experience--were compared on measures of depression, anxiety, problems with family relations, and alcohol abuse....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: KIRK, ALAN BRIAN.
Format: Others
Subjects:
Online Access: http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/lib/digcoll/etd/3086288
id ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_75771
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_757712019-07-01T05:15:03Z A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECTS OF VIETNAM COMBAT PARTICIPATION ON ADULT PSYCHO-SOCIAL FUNCTIONING AMONG ARMY AND AIR FORCE RESERVE PERSONNEL (POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER) KIRK, ALAN BRIAN. Florida State University Text 286 p. A comparative study of 210 Vietnam Era veterans who are currently serving in the U.S. military Reserves. Two major groups--Vietnam combat veterans and Vietnam Era veterans with no combat experience--were compared on measures of depression, anxiety, problems with family relations, and alcohol abuse. Incidence of post-traumatic stress disorders symptomatology as described in the DSM-III was evaluated within the group of combat veterans. A simple additive model which describes a direct and positive relationship between degree of combat exposure and current incidence of problems with adult psychosocial functioning was shown to be inadequate. Preservice psycho-social problem levels were shown to be a more important predictor of post-combat difficulties than the degree of exposure to combat in Vietnam. There were no statistically significant and nontrivial differences between combat veterans and non-combat veterans on each of the measures of adult psycho-social functioning. Although a large proportion of combat veterans reported a high level of problems shortly after their tenure in Vietnam, the incidence of problems had decreased dramatically over the years since Vietnam. The findings contradict past claims that post-traumatic stress disorder represents an ongoing, severe problem for large numbers of Vietnam veterans. On campus use only. Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 47-02, Section: A, page: 0658. Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1986. Social Work http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/lib/digcoll/etd/3086288 Dissertation Abstracts International AAI8609673 3086288 FSDT3086288 fsu:75771 http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A75771/datastream/TN/view/A%20COMPARATIVE%20ANALYSIS%20OF%20THE%20EFFECTS%20OF%20VIETNAM%20COMBAT%20PARTICIPATION%20ON%20ADULT%20PSYCHO-SOCIAL%20FUNCTIONING%20AMONG%20ARMY%20AND%20AIR%20FORCE%20RESERVE%20PERSONNEL%20%28POST-TRAUMATIC%20STRESS%20DISORDER%29.jpg
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Social Work
spellingShingle Social Work
A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECTS OF VIETNAM COMBAT PARTICIPATION ON ADULT PSYCHO-SOCIAL FUNCTIONING AMONG ARMY AND AIR FORCE RESERVE PERSONNEL (POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER)
description A comparative study of 210 Vietnam Era veterans who are currently serving in the U.S. military Reserves. Two major groups--Vietnam combat veterans and Vietnam Era veterans with no combat experience--were compared on measures of depression, anxiety, problems with family relations, and alcohol abuse. Incidence of post-traumatic stress disorders symptomatology as described in the DSM-III was evaluated within the group of combat veterans. === A simple additive model which describes a direct and positive relationship between degree of combat exposure and current incidence of problems with adult psychosocial functioning was shown to be inadequate. Preservice psycho-social problem levels were shown to be a more important predictor of post-combat difficulties than the degree of exposure to combat in Vietnam. === There were no statistically significant and nontrivial differences between combat veterans and non-combat veterans on each of the measures of adult psycho-social functioning. Although a large proportion of combat veterans reported a high level of problems shortly after their tenure in Vietnam, the incidence of problems had decreased dramatically over the years since Vietnam. The findings contradict past claims that post-traumatic stress disorder represents an ongoing, severe problem for large numbers of Vietnam veterans. === Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 47-02, Section: A, page: 0658. === Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Florida State University, 1986.
author2 KIRK, ALAN BRIAN.
author_facet KIRK, ALAN BRIAN.
title A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECTS OF VIETNAM COMBAT PARTICIPATION ON ADULT PSYCHO-SOCIAL FUNCTIONING AMONG ARMY AND AIR FORCE RESERVE PERSONNEL (POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER)
title_short A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECTS OF VIETNAM COMBAT PARTICIPATION ON ADULT PSYCHO-SOCIAL FUNCTIONING AMONG ARMY AND AIR FORCE RESERVE PERSONNEL (POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER)
title_full A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECTS OF VIETNAM COMBAT PARTICIPATION ON ADULT PSYCHO-SOCIAL FUNCTIONING AMONG ARMY AND AIR FORCE RESERVE PERSONNEL (POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER)
title_fullStr A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECTS OF VIETNAM COMBAT PARTICIPATION ON ADULT PSYCHO-SOCIAL FUNCTIONING AMONG ARMY AND AIR FORCE RESERVE PERSONNEL (POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER)
title_full_unstemmed A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECTS OF VIETNAM COMBAT PARTICIPATION ON ADULT PSYCHO-SOCIAL FUNCTIONING AMONG ARMY AND AIR FORCE RESERVE PERSONNEL (POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER)
title_sort comparative analysis of the effects of vietnam combat participation on adult psycho-social functioning among army and air force reserve personnel (post-traumatic stress disorder)
url http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/lib/digcoll/etd/3086288
_version_ 1719217893032329216