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Emotional trauma in athletic injury ...
~
O'Connor, John William, Sr.
Emotional trauma in athletic injury and the relationship among coping skills, injury severity, and post traumatic stress.
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
書名/作者:
Emotional trauma in athletic injury and the relationship among coping skills, injury severity, and post traumatic stress.
作者:
O'Connor, John William, Sr.
面頁冊數:
91 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 71-10, Section: B, page: 6447.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International71-10B.
標題:
Psychology, Behavioral.
標題:
Business Administration, Sports Management.
標題:
Health Sciences, Recreation.
標題:
Psychology, Clinical.
標題:
Psychology, Physiological.
ISBN:
9781124166117
摘要、提要註:
This study explored the possibility that emotional trauma symptoms occur in athletic injury and the extent to which coping skills and injury severity affect levels of posttraumatic distress. Previous research findings on emotional distress and athletic injury revealed that anxiety, stress, and depression in athletes were elevated following sport injuries. No past studies, however, tested for the presence of posttraumatic distress symptoms following athletic injuries. Therefore, the purpose of the current study was to explore the experiences of posttraumatic stress and coping for injured, elite athletes. The research design included a quantitative survey and was grounded in a psychodynamic framework. The Trauma Symptom Inventory and the Brief COPE Inventory were administered to 35 injured athletes in the northeastern US to assess if trauma symptoms were present post-injury and any reported connection between coping strategies and trauma. A one-sample t-test analysis was conducted to test for reported levels of elevated traumatic symptoms. Two independent sample t-tests were conducted to compare the trauma levels of athletes with avoidant coping skills versus active coping skills as well as those with severe injuries versus moderate or mild injuries. Findings indicated that posttraumatic stress symptoms were present in a significant number of injured athletes, yet coping skills and injury severity were not related to the intensity of traumatic symptoms the athletes experienced. Results from this study will raise awareness of posttraumatic distress among athletes and treatment options available to applied sport psychologists. The implications for positive social change include increasing awareness of a previously neglected area in the research and treatment of athletic injury and improving the emotional and mental health care of injured athletes.
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3418358
Emotional trauma in athletic injury and the relationship among coping skills, injury severity, and post traumatic stress.
O'Connor, John William, Sr.
Emotional trauma in athletic injury and the relationship among coping skills, injury severity, and post traumatic stress.
- 91 p.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 71-10, Section: B, page: 6447.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Walden University, 2010.
This study explored the possibility that emotional trauma symptoms occur in athletic injury and the extent to which coping skills and injury severity affect levels of posttraumatic distress. Previous research findings on emotional distress and athletic injury revealed that anxiety, stress, and depression in athletes were elevated following sport injuries. No past studies, however, tested for the presence of posttraumatic distress symptoms following athletic injuries. Therefore, the purpose of the current study was to explore the experiences of posttraumatic stress and coping for injured, elite athletes. The research design included a quantitative survey and was grounded in a psychodynamic framework. The Trauma Symptom Inventory and the Brief COPE Inventory were administered to 35 injured athletes in the northeastern US to assess if trauma symptoms were present post-injury and any reported connection between coping strategies and trauma. A one-sample t-test analysis was conducted to test for reported levels of elevated traumatic symptoms. Two independent sample t-tests were conducted to compare the trauma levels of athletes with avoidant coping skills versus active coping skills as well as those with severe injuries versus moderate or mild injuries. Findings indicated that posttraumatic stress symptoms were present in a significant number of injured athletes, yet coping skills and injury severity were not related to the intensity of traumatic symptoms the athletes experienced. Results from this study will raise awareness of posttraumatic distress among athletes and treatment options available to applied sport psychologists. The implications for positive social change include increasing awareness of a previously neglected area in the research and treatment of athletic injury and improving the emotional and mental health care of injured athletes.
ISBN: 9781124166117Subjects--Topical Terms:
423442
Psychology, Behavioral.
Emotional trauma in athletic injury and the relationship among coping skills, injury severity, and post traumatic stress.
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Emotional trauma in athletic injury and the relationship among coping skills, injury severity, and post traumatic stress.
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 71-10, Section: B, page: 6447.
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This study explored the possibility that emotional trauma symptoms occur in athletic injury and the extent to which coping skills and injury severity affect levels of posttraumatic distress. Previous research findings on emotional distress and athletic injury revealed that anxiety, stress, and depression in athletes were elevated following sport injuries. No past studies, however, tested for the presence of posttraumatic distress symptoms following athletic injuries. Therefore, the purpose of the current study was to explore the experiences of posttraumatic stress and coping for injured, elite athletes. The research design included a quantitative survey and was grounded in a psychodynamic framework. The Trauma Symptom Inventory and the Brief COPE Inventory were administered to 35 injured athletes in the northeastern US to assess if trauma symptoms were present post-injury and any reported connection between coping strategies and trauma. A one-sample t-test analysis was conducted to test for reported levels of elevated traumatic symptoms. Two independent sample t-tests were conducted to compare the trauma levels of athletes with avoidant coping skills versus active coping skills as well as those with severe injuries versus moderate or mild injuries. Findings indicated that posttraumatic stress symptoms were present in a significant number of injured athletes, yet coping skills and injury severity were not related to the intensity of traumatic symptoms the athletes experienced. Results from this study will raise awareness of posttraumatic distress among athletes and treatment options available to applied sport psychologists. The implications for positive social change include increasing awareness of a previously neglected area in the research and treatment of athletic injury and improving the emotional and mental health care of injured athletes.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3418358
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