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Positive and Negative Changes in the Lives of Israeli Former Prisoners of War

Authors :
Mark Waysman
Zahava Solomon
Joseph Schwarzwald
Abraham Ohry
Yuval Neria
Michael Wiener
Source :
Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology. 18:419-435
Publication Year :
1999
Publisher :
Guilford Publications, 1999.

Abstract

The study of traumatic stress has been biased toward pathological perspectives, with relatively few investigations assessing salutogenic possibilities. The present study assesses (1) both positive and negative psychological consequences of war captivity, and (2) the contribution of specific stressors and coping in captivity and at homecoming, to positive and negative changes. Participants in the study were 1 64 ex-POWs and 1 84 comparable controls. Results indicated that in both groups positive changes were more frequently endorsed than negative ones. Ex-POWs and controls did not differ in positive changes, yet the former reported more negative changes than the latter. The multidimensionality of human response to trauma is discussed. It is suggested that many trauma victims are able to compartmentalize their reactions and thus contain their distress so that it does not undermine subsequent psychological growth.

Details

ISSN :
07367236
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9ee3f6dd02b720b24bf3107fc06c7dbb