Adjustment following the mass shooting at Virginia Tech: The roles of resource loss and gain. |
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Authors: | Littleton, Heather L. Axsom, Danny Grills-Taquechel, Amie E. |
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Abstract: | Unfortunately, many individuals will be exposed to traumatic events during their lifetime. The experience of loss and gain of valued resources may represent important predictors of psychological distress following these experiences. The current study examined the extent to which loss and gain of interpersonal and intrapersonal resources (e.g., hope, intimacy) predicted psychological distress among college women following the mass shooting at Virginia Tech (VT). Participants were 193 college women from whom preevent psychological distress and social support data had been obtained. These women completed surveys regarding their psychological distress, coping, and resource loss and gain 2- and 6-months after the VT shooting. Structural equation modeling supported that resource loss predicted greater psychological distress 6 months after the shooting whereas resource gain was weakly related to lower levels of psychological distress. The study also revealed that social support and psychological distress prior to the shooting predicted resource loss, and social support and active coping with the shooting predicted resource gain. Implications of the results for research examining the roles of resource loss and gain in posttrauma adjustment and the development of interventions following mass trauma are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | mass trauma conservation of resources theory campus violence structural equation modeling interpersonal resources intrapersonal resources psychological distress social support coping post-trauma adjustment Virginia Tech shooting |
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