Gender Role Conflict, Emotion Regulation, and PTSD Symptom Severity in Acutely Injured Trauma Survivors

File(s)
Date
2020-08-01Author
Heyrman, Katelyn Elaine
Department
Educational Psychology
Advisor(s)
Stephen R Wester
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Within the acutely injured population, men are at an increased risk for trauma exposure and hospitalization. Previous literature has suggested that emotional dysregulation and masculine gender roles are associated with psychological distress and maintenance of PTSD symptoms. Despite these findings, researchers have focused their attention on masculine gender roles within the Veteran and college populations. The current study aimed to assess the Gender Role Conflict within the acutely injured population and determine if emotion regulation strategy moderated the relationship between masculine gender roles and PTSD symptom severity. Participants consisted of 90 traumatically injured, cisgender males (Mage= 44.88 years; 60% White) who were recruited from a large Midwest Level 1 Trauma Center. Findings suggest a significant positive association between Conflict Between Work and Family (CBWFR) and PTSD symptom severity (p = .001) and Restricted Emotionality (RE) and PTSD symptom severity (p =.040). Despite these significant associations, emotion regulation did not significantly moderate the relationship between Gender Role Conflict and PTSD symptom severity. Results and treatment implications are discussed.
Subject
Emotion Regulation
Gender Role Conflict
Masculine gender roles
PTSD
Trauma
Traumatically injured
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/92471Type
dissertation
