The conceptualization of emotion regulation difficulties, and its association with posttraumatic stress symptoms in traumatized refugees

Journal of Anxiety Disorders
Emma L DoolanAngela Nickerson

Abstract

This study investigated the conceptualization of emotion regulation difficulties in a sample of refugees with varying levels of posttraumatic stress (PTS), and examined whether specific emotion regulation difficulties were associated with PTS severity. Refugees were administered an abbreviated version of the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale, the PTSD Symptom Scale - Interview Version, and the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire. Confirmatory Factor Analysis was used to examine model fit for the 6-factor model originally proposed by the developers of the DERS and the more recently proposed 5-factor model that excludes the awareness subscale. Both models displayed adequate fit. After controlling for age, gender, time in Australia, and trauma exposure, the clarity and strategies subscales were significantly associated with PTS severity. The association between impaired emotional clarity and reduced agency related to accessing regulation strategies and PTS severity in this refugee sample highlights the need for further research to assess interventions that target these disruptions in refugees.

Citations

Jul 22, 2018·The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease·Tannah ChaseMichael J Zvolensky
Sep 25, 2018·Journal of Sex Research·Elizabeth R BirdKelly Cue Davis
Aug 31, 2019·Archives of Sexual Behavior·Justin P DubéNatalie O Rosen
Jun 2, 2021·Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews·Denise A HienRobert Melara
Sep 5, 2021·Translational Psychiatry·Kyung Hwa LeeSeog Ju Kim

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