Publications by authors named "Keith R Aronson"

Article Synopsis
  • Post-9/11 veterans, facing more deployments and trauma, often report personal growth despite their experiences.
  • A study involving 5,245 veterans measured posttraumatic growth (PTG), focusing on aspects like relationships, personal strength, and overall life appreciation.
  • Results indicated veterans felt most growth in personal appreciation and less in spiritual aspects, with female veterans and those with trauma-related experiences reporting higher PTG, while social support and resilience were linked to lower growth levels.
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Introduction: The impact of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), warfare exposure, and mental health symptoms upon changes in body mass index (BMI) were examined in a large U.S. post-9/11 veteran sample to assess gender-specific changes in BMI within the first 2½ years after military service.

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The COVID-19 pandemic has led to economic turndowns, social restrictions, and family life alterations. The stress induced by the public health crisis and its consequences are beginning to be explored. This study examined stress experiences since the pandemic'sonset in work, financial, social, and health domainsamong a large sample of post-9/11, United States military veterans.

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Early identification of children and youth who engage in problematic sexual behavior is important for all parties involved, such as children who exhibit and are impacted by the behavior. There are several reliable and valid identification tools that can be used to recognize problematic sexual behavior in children and youth (PSB-CY) in clinical practice; however, professionals who work with children in non-clinical settings (i.e.

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Article Synopsis
  • Military sexual trauma (MST) is linked to adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and warfare exposure, with a study showing that veterans with ACEs are more likely to experience unwanted sexual attention.
  • Female veterans who experienced ACEs without warfare exposure faced increased risks, while a significant interaction between ACEs and warfare exposure heightened risks for both genders.
  • The study emphasizes the need for screening and trauma-informed care practices to help address the effects of past traumas.
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Background: Underemployment is a challenge for the civilian workforce and a particular risk for veterans as they transition from military service to civilian employment. Workers' economic and demographic characteristics factor into underemployment risk. Veterans may be at greater risk due to specific economic and demographic factors, transitional factors (e.

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This study assessed the effectiveness of employment programs components, which resulted in the identification of content and process components that increase employability. Employment program use was studied among 1172 United States of America military veterans to determine which content (i.e.

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The Army Family Advocacy Program (Army FAP) strives to prevent family violence and intervene to reduce the deleterious effects of exposure to family violence. This paper examines the individual, family, community, and treatment factors associated with family violence revictimization. Case files of 134 families with substantiated child maltreatment and associated Army FAP interventions that closed in 2013 were coded across risk and protective factors and intervention characteristics and were matched to Army Central Registry files to identify revictimization rates through 2017.

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Objective: Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are early life experiences of abuse and neglect, and observed violence, among others. For military veterans, both ACEs and combat exposure are associated with mental health problems.

Method: This study examines the relationship between ACEs and combat exposure on the current mental health in a large sample of recent post-9/11 U.

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Background: Numerous programs exist to support veterans in their transitions to civilian life. Programs are offered by a host of governmental and non-governmental stakeholders. Veterans report encountering many barriers to program participation.

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Objective: The Veterans Metrics Initiative is a longitudinal survey study examining the military-to-civilian transition of a cohort of new post-9/11 veterans. This study identified the programs and services used by new post-9/11 veterans who screened positive for mental health problems (N=3,295) and factors that predicted use.

Methods: The population of veterans who separated from active duty service in the 90 days prior to August-November 2016 (N=48,965) was identified and invited to participate in the study.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Evaluators face difficulties in assessing the effectiveness of various Veteran support programs due to a lack of evidence on their impacts, complicating the identification of the most beneficial options for Veterans in need.
  • - A proposed solution is the Common Components Analysis (CCA), which focuses on finding shared elements across different programs rather than evaluating them individually, especially important given the limited rigorous evidence available for many Veteran programs.
  • - This report discusses a pilot study that adapted the CCA approach to explore five domains of well-being for Veterans, aiming to gather input through an online survey and ultimately strengthen the evidence for program effectiveness when linked with a longitudinal research design.
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Objective: Large numbers of United States service members and veterans are enrolling in colleges and universities. Many are experiencing posttraumatic stress symptoms secondary to their military service, and these symptoms are associated with academic dysfunction. However, little is known about the mechanism(s) through which posttraumatic stress increases risk for academic difficulties.

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Background: Little is known about military families who have a dependent with special health care and/or educational needs. The Exceptional Family Member Program (EFMP) is designed to link these families to military/community support services through family support provider (FS providers).

Objective: The aim of this study was to understand FS providers' perspectives on the kinds of current challenges the families with whom they work face.

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This study examined the day-to-day lives of early stage lung cancer survivors who were discharged from treatment between 2 and 24 months prior to the study. Lung cancer survivors were called on eight consecutive nights and completed an interview about their daily experiences. Repeated measures, multilevel analysis of the phone interview data was conducted.

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Article Synopsis
  • A study explored the relationship between physical activity (PA) and menopausal hot flashes (HFs) using a daily diary approach with middle-aged women to identify how PA impacts HFs over time.
  • Results showed significant variations in the relationship; for half of the participants, PA either reduced or increased HFs based on individual differences.
  • Key factors influencing these differences included perceived control over HFs, alongside individual characteristics like mood, depression, and anxiety.
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Background: Many smokers report smoking because it helps them modulate their negative affect (NA). The stress induction model of smoking suggests, however, that smoking causes stress and concomitant NA. Empirical support for the stress induction model has primarily derived from retrospective reports and experimental manipulations with non-representative samples of smokers.

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Objective: Two studies were conducted to assess the construct validity of the Symptom Interpretation Questionnaire (SIQ) with particular attention to its relationship to social desirability, daily symptom, mood, hassles reports, and personality.

Methods: Participants completed a battery of self-report measures collected at one point in time and completed several measures on a daily basis for 60 days. The three subscales of the SIQ (Psychological, Somatic, Normalizing) were correlated with theoretically related and unrelated constructs to assess its convergent and discriminant validity.

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Objective: The purpose of this study is to examine the role of emotional reactivity (ER) in symptom reporting and conceptualize somatizing processes as a signal detection task. Emotional reactivity has been theorized to influence symptom reporting through somatic sensitivity as well as via a negative reporting style. We assess the degree to which these two competing theories about the role of ER are accurate within the signal detection framework.

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This study assessed the job satisfaction of nurses who work in private psychiatric hospitals. In 1998 and 1999 an anonymous employee satisfaction survey was completed by all 3,024 employees of 39 for-profit psychiatric hospitals owned by the same hospital corporation. Of this total, 546 were registered nurses (RNs).

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People differ in the extent to which they emphasize feelings of activation or deactivation in their verbal reports of experienced emotion, termed arousal focus (AF). Two multimethod studies indicate that AF is linked to heightened interoceptive sensitivity (as measured by performance on a heartbeat detection task). People who were more sensitive to their heartbeats emphasized feelings of activation and deactivation when reporting their experiences of emotion over time more than did those who were less sensitive.

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The authors report on the factor structure of an employee satisfaction questionnaire designed for use with psychiatric hospital employees. The actions and attitudes of management were, by far, the single most prominent factor. This factor captures the extent to which management respects workers, operates with honesty and integrity, promotes efficiency, and has open lines of communication with employees.

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