Guilt and it’s relationship to mental illness and suicide attempts in an Australian veteran population with Posttraumatic Stress disorder

Kerr Katelyn, Madeline Romaniuk, Sarah McLeay, S Walker, J Henderson, A Khoo

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    Abstract

    Background Australian veterans have an increased risk of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Guilt is a common post-trauma reaction; however, research in this area is limited Purpose This study aimed to explore the relationship between guilt, PTSD severity, alcohol use, anger, history of suicide attempts and deployment period among Australian veterans with PTSD Material and Methods A retrospective analysis was conducted on 219 ex-service personnel diagnosed with PTSD who attended a Military Trauma Recovery Day Program Veterans completed self-report questionnaires as well as a clinician-administered PTSD assessment tool Demographic information and self-reported history of suicide attempts were also recorded Results Guilt scores were significantly correlated with PTSD severity (R=0411), anger (R=0373) and alcohol use (R=0239) Guilt was most strongly correlated with the re-experiencing cluster of PTSD (R=0420), although it was significantly correlated with all clusters (hyperarousal R=0343, and avoidance R=0327) Guilt scores were significantly higher in those who had attempted suicide and for contemporary veterans Conclusions In Australian veterans with PTSD, guilt was significantly associated with PTSD severity, anger, alcohol use, attempted suicide and being a contemporary veteran The study highlights the importance of guilt identification and treatment by clinicians for improved outcomes Conflicting interests The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalJournal of Military and Veterans' Health
    Volume29
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2021

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