Iranian Journal of War and Public Health

eISSN (English): 2980-969X
eISSN (Persian): 2008-2630
pISSN (Persian): 2008-2622
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Showing 2 results for Personality Trait

M.a. Mohammadyfar , M. Najafi ,
Volume 6, Issue 3 (3-2014)
Abstract

Aims: Post-traumatic stress disorder has negative consequences on physical, psychological health and marital satisfaction of veterans. Also, previous studies have suggested an association between personality and post-traumatic stress. The aim of present study was the comparison of personality trait and marital satisfaction in veterans with and without post-traumatic stress disorder.

Materials & Methods: In this causal-comparative study, 200 veterans whose names were recorded in the Martyr Foundation and Veterans Affairs Administration of Chaharmahal va Bakhtiari province were selected through cluster random sampling method. The tool that used was Lee and Ashton personality traits questionnaire; ENRICH Marital Satisfaction Scale and the demographic questionnaire. Data were analyzed using multivariate and univariate analyzes of variance.

Findings: Marital satisfaction and personality traits scores in the two veterans with and without post-traumatic disorders had significant difference (p<0.001). Veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder reported lower scores in components of personality issues, marital relations, conflict resolution, financial management, leisure, sex, children and marriage. Also, veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder reported lower scores in subscales of extraversion, agreement conscientiousness and openness.

Conclusion: Marital satisfaction and personality traits in veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder is less than veterans without post-traumatic stress disorder 


A.r. Ghalenavi, N. Mikaeili, M. Ebadi, S. Basharpoor,
Volume 14, Issue 3 (7-2022)
Abstract

Aims: This study aimed to provide a causal model of personality traits and meaning in life with post-traumatic growth, with a mediating role of psychological resilience in veterans.
Instrument & Methods: The method of this research is descriptive-correlational. Data analysis is done through path analysis and structural equations. The statistical population of the study was all veterans under the support of the Sabzevar Martyr Foundation in 2021 and 320 subjects were selected as a sample. To collect data, the post-traumatic growth inventory, the brief HEXACO inventory, the meaning in life questionnaire, and the Connor-Davidson resilience scale were used. All data analyzes were performed by SPSS 24 and LISREL 8.8 software.
Findings: The proposed model had a good fit (GFI: 0.86, CFI: 0.92).  Also, personality traits and meaning in life, directly and indirectly, affected post-traumatic growth.
Conclusion: This model can be a good model for identifying the factors involved in the post-traumatic growth of veterans and the results of this study can be used for planning to increase post-traumatic growth.
 

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