Lynda A. King’s research while affiliated with National Center for PTSD and other places

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Publications (137)


Late-onset stress symptomatology (LOSS) scale – short form: development and validation
  • Article

May 2018

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90 Reads

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13 Citations

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Anica Pless Kaiser

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Lynda King

Objectives: Late-onset stress symptomatology (LOSS) is a phenomenon observed in older combat veterans who experience increased combat-related thoughts, feelings, and reminiscences corresponding with the changes and challenges of aging. Previously, we developed the LOSS Scale to assess LOSS. This paper describes the development and validation of a LOSS Scale short form (LOSS-SF) to screen veterans in various settings who may be actively re-examining their past wartime experiences. Method: Three studies examined the reliability and validity of the LOSS-SF in separate samples of male combat veterans age 55 and older (total N = 346). Veterans were administered measures via telephone and mail survey. Correlation and regression analyses examined the reliability and validity of the LOSS-SF. Results: The LOSS-SF exhibited strong internal consistency (alpha = .93), test-retest reliability (2 week interval on average; r = .88), and good concurrent validity with the LOSS Scale (r = .81). Convergent and divergent validity were supported by the pattern of correlations between the LOSS-SF and other construct measures. Conclusion: The LOSS-SF is a reliable and valid measure to quickly assess thoughts, feelings, and reminiscences about past combat experiences in older veterans and identify those veterans in distress who may benefit from psychological interventions..




From Late-Onset Stress Symptomatology to Later-Adulthood Trauma Reengagement in Aging Combat Veterans: Taking a Broader View

November 2015

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197 Reads

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94 Citations

The Gerontologist

About a decade ago we proposed the notion of late-onset stress symptomatology, to characterize the later-life emergence of symptoms related to early-life warzone trauma among aging combat Veterans. We hypothesized that aging-related challenges (role transition and loss, death of family members and friends, physical and cognitive decline) might lead to increased reminiscence, and possibly distress, among Veterans who had previously dealt successfully with earlier traumatic events. Recently, we have reexamined our earlier ideas, to better reflect our developing understanding of this phenomenon, and to incorporate more contemporary perspectives on posttraumatic growth and resilience. As a result, we have broadened our conceptualization to later-adulthood trauma reengagement (LATR). We suggest that in later life many combat Veterans confront and rework their wartime memories in an effort to find meaning and build coherence. Through reminiscence, life review, and wrestling with issues such as integrity versus despair, they intentionally reengage with experiences they avoided or managed successfully earlier in life, perhaps without resolution or integration. This article links LATR to classic gerontologic notions, and elaborates how the LATR process can lead positively to personal growth or negatively to increased symptomatology. We also address the role of preventive intervention in enhancing positive outcomes for Veterans who reengage with their wartime memories in later life.


Temporal Associations Among Chronic PTSD Symptoms in U.S. Combat Veterans
  • Article
  • Full-text available

September 2015

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170 Reads

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42 Citations

Journal of Traumatic Stress

The present study examined fluctuation over time in symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among 34 combat veterans (28 with diagnosed PTSD, 6 with subclinical symptoms) assessed every 2 weeks for up to 2 years (range of assessments = 13-52). Temporal relationships were examined among four PTSD symptom clusters (reexperiencing, avoidance, emotional numbing, and hyperarousal) with particular attention to the influence of hyperarousal. Multilevel cross-lagged random coefficients autoregression for intensive time series data analyses were used to model symptom fluctuation decades after combat experiences. As anticipated, hyperarousal predicted subsequent fluctuations in the 3 other PTSD symptom clusters (reexperiencing, avoidance, emotional numbing) at subsequent 2-week intervals (rs = .45, .36, and .40, respectively). Additionally, emotional numbing influenced later reexperiencing and avoidance, and reexperiencing influenced later hyperarousal (rs = .44, .40, and .34, respectively). These findings underscore the important influence of hyperarousal. Furthermore, results indicate a bidirectional relationship between hyperarousal and reexperiencing as well as a possible chaining of symptoms (hyperarousal → emotional numbing → reexperiencing → hyperarousal) and establish potential internal, intrapersonal mechanisms for the maintenance of persistent PTSD symptoms. Results suggested that clinical interventions targeting hyperarousal and emotional numbing symptoms may hold promise for PTSD of long duration.

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Establishing a Methodology to Examine the Effects of War-Zone PTSD on the Family: The Family Foundations Study

June 2015

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358 Reads

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18 Citations

Military deployment may adversely affect not only returning veterans, but their families, as well. As a result, researchers have increasingly focused on identifying risk and protective factors for successful family adaptation to war-zone deployment, re-integration of the returning veteran, and the longer-term psychosocial consequences of deployment experienced by some veterans and families. Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among returning veterans may pose particular challenges to military and military veteran families; however, questions remain regarding the impact of the course of veteran PTSD and other potential moderating factors on family adaptation to military deployment. The Family Foundations Study builds upon an established longitudinal cohort of Army soldiers (i.e. the Neurocognition Deployment Health Study) to help address remaining knowledge gaps. This report describes the conceptual framework and key gaps in knowledge that guided the study design, methodological challenges and special considerations in conducting military family research, and how these gaps, challenges, and special considerations are addressed by the study. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


Understanding How Deployment Experiences Change over Time: Comparison of Female and Male OEF/OIF and Gulf War Veterans

April 2015

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241 Reads

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16 Citations

Psychological Trauma Theory Research Practice and Policy

Despite increased attention to the evolving nature of war, the unique challenges of contemporary deployment, and women's changing role in warfare, few studies have examined differences in deployment stressors across eras of service or evaluated how gender differences in deployment experiences have changed over time. Using data collected from two national survey studies, we examined war cohort and gender differences in veterans' reports of both mission-related and interpersonal stressors during deployment. Although Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom veterans reported more combat experiences and greater preparedness for deployment compared to Gulf War veterans, Gulf War veterans reported higher levels of other mission-related stressors, including difficult living and working environment, perceived threat, and potential exposure to nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons. Gender differences also emerged, with men reporting greater exposure to mission-related stressors and women reporting higher levels of interpersonal stressors. However, the size and nature of gender differences did not differ significantly when comparing veterans of the two eras. By understanding how risk factors for PTSD differ based on war era and gender, veterans' experiences can be better contextualized. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).


Fig. 2. Final structural model predicting long-term positive adjustment over approximately 30 years. Solid lines = positive paths. Dashed lines = negative paths. Bolded paths represent statistically significant associations (|CR| > 1.96). Nonbolded paths (RMD → PAM, PST → SOC, and PST →RET) have |CR| > 1.5 but ≤ 1.96. Unstandardized regression coefficients (95% confidence intervals) are provided. AGE = age at time of capture; EDU = education at time of capture; LLE = later-life events; MAR = marital status at time of capture; PAM = positive appraisal of military experiences; PHT = physical torture; POS = positive adjustment; PST = psychological torture; RET = concerns about retirement; RMD = repatriation mental distress; SOC = social support.  
Table 2 . Correlations Among Variables in the Measurement Model 
Positive Adjustment Among American Repatriated Prisoners of the Vietnam War: Modeling the Long-Term Effects of Captivity

December 2014

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116 Reads

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14 Citations

Clinical Psychological Science

A longitudinal life span model of factors contributing to later-life positive adjustment was tested on 567 American repatriated prisoners from the Vietnam War. This model encompassed demographics at time of capture and attributes assessed after return to the United States (reports of torture and mental distress) and approximately three decades later (later-life stressors, perceived social support, positive appraisal of military experiences, and positive adjustment). Age and education at time of capture and physical torture were associated with repatriation mental distress, which directly predicted poorer adjustment 30 years later. Physical torture also had a salutary effect, enhancing later-life positive appraisal of military experiences. Later-life events were directly and indirectly (through concerns about retirement) associated with positive adjustment. Results suggest that the personal resources of older age and more education and early-life adverse experiences can have cascading effects over the life span to impact well-being in both positive and negative ways.



Deployment Risk and Resilience Inventory-2 (DRRI-2): An Updated Tool for Assessing Psychosocial Risk and Resilience Factors Among Service Members and Veterans

December 2013

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3,025 Reads

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305 Citations

Journal of Traumatic Stress

The Deployment Risk and Resilience Inventory (DRRI) is a widely used instrument for assessing deployment-related risk and resilience factors among war veterans. A revision of this instrument was recently undertaken to enhance the DRRI's applicability across a variety of deployment-related circumstances and military subgroups. The resulting suite of 17 distinct DRRI-2 scales is the product of a multiyear psychometric endeavor that involved (a) focus groups with Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom (OEF/OIF) veterans to inform an assessment of the content validity of original DRRI measures, (b) examination of item and scale characteristics of revised scales in a national sample of 469 OEF/OIF veterans, and (c) administration of refined scales to a second national sample of 1,046 OEF/OIF veterans to confirm their psychometric quality. Both classical test theory and item response theory analytical strategies were applied to inform major revisions, which included updating the coverage of warfare-related stressors, expanding the assessment of family factors throughout the deployment cycle, and shortening scales. Finalized DRRI-2 scales demonstrated strong internal consistency reliability and criterion-related validity. The DRRI-2 can be applied to examine the role that psychosocial factors play in postdeployment health and inform interventions aimed at reducing risk and enhancing resilience among war veterans.


Citations (97)


... Compassion Fatigue Secondary traumatic stress subscale. Automated item selection procedure (with genetic algorithm) suggested a unidimensional scale with 12 items (20,21,22,28,29,31,32,34,36,39,40,44) Table 1 for details, and Supplementary Appendix 1 for the norms. Distribution of errors for Burnout. ...

Reference:

The development of the Compassion Satisfaction and Compassion Fatigue scale
Resilience–Recovery Factors in Post–Traumatic Stress Disorder Among Female and Male Vietnam Veterans: Hardiness, Postwar Social Support, and Additional Stressful Life Events

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

... This is perhaps unsurprising and reflects military culture; service personnel are trained to cope with combat-related adversity and enhanced coping ability may be an enduring benefit. "Warrior ethos" (Brim, 2013), which endorses emotion suppression and pain-tolerance, might have led veteran controls to overestimate their coping ability, to avoid "making a fuss" or appearing weak. However, this seems unlikely since they reported using similar coping strategies (including seeking support) as civilians. ...

Military Psychologists' Desk Reference

... Prisoners of war (POWs) are faced with multiple stressors while in captivity, which follow the stressors and dangers endured in combat and war. During captivity, POWs suffer from mental and physical torture, humiliation, injury, food and water deprivation, conditions of isolation, and lack of sanitation (Lee, Spiro, Tyzik, King, & King, 2018). Unlike battlefield experiences, captivity has been linked to a unique form of traumatic experience, one that is an ongoing, controlling, and coercive interpersonal relationship with one's captors (Solomon & Ohry, 2010). ...

Studying longitudinal links from early adult adversity to later-life well-being: American repatriated prisoners of the Vietnam war.
  • Citing Chapter
  • January 2018

... The findings presented are based on a subset of participants and data from a larger (N = 346) multistudy validation of the Late-Onset Stress Symptomatology Scale-Short Form (LOSS-SF; Brady et al., 2018). The measures selected for this study are a subset of those used in the parent study. ...

Late-onset stress symptomatology (LOSS) scale – short form: development and validation
  • Citing Article
  • May 2018

... Not surprisingly, considerable efforts were undertaken to operationalize and measure resilience, focusing on promoting attributes and similar protective factors that support and maintain well-being or work performance even under difficult circumstances. Such factors are typically treated as independent variables or predictors of some dependent variable representing successful adaptation (King & King, 2013). ...

Measuring Resilience and Growth
  • Citing Chapter
  • July 2013

... Differential impact of PTSD symptom clusters is also possible. Intrusive thoughts and emotional numbing symptoms relate more strongly with alcohol misuse (e.g., Langdon et al., 2016). Mechanisms of these linkages such as motivations for drinking (e.g., McCabe et al., 2019;Simpson et al., 2014), emotion regulation (e.g., Hien et al., 2017), readiness to change, and cravings (e.g., Badour et al., 2017) are important potential moderators or mediators of the temporal association between PTSS and drinking. ...

Examination of the Dynamic Interplay between Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms and Alcohol Misuse among Combat-Exposed Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF)/Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) Veterans
  • Citing Article
  • February 2016

Journal of Affective Disorders

... Identifying psychological distress promptly in the preceding period and targeting it with appropriate symptom management may block subsequent development/exacerbation of long-lasting comorbid psychological distress and functional impairment. Yet, knowledge about temporal relationships between PGD, PTSD, and depression is limited with most of the focus on PTSD and depression [10][11][12][13][14][15][16], less on PGD and PTSD [17][18][19][20], and least on PGD and depression [19,21,22]. Only one study [19] was found to explore the temporal relationships between PGD, PTSD, and depression simultaneously following traumatic losses from an airplane crash. ...

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Depression Symptomatology in a Sample of Gulf War Veterans: A Prospective Analysis

Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology

... Some studies have focused on protective factors that may prevent the development of PTSD (Hoge et al., 2007). The most frequently cited protective factors in the literature include social support from the broader social environment, supportive family relationships, self-efficacy, resilience, using several coping strategies (e.g., pragmatic and goal-directed coping), some personality factors such as hardiness, flexible adaptation skills, and having a "sense of coherence" (SOC; Horn & Feder, 2018;Institute of Medicine, 2006;King et al., 2012;Thabet, 2017). The research focusing on individuals exposed to more traumatic events, such as firefighters, police officers, and veterans, shows that cumulative traumatic events may increase trauma-related self-efficacy, and may also increase the ability to confront the reality of, and impact of, traumatic events (King et al., 2012;Yuan et al., 2011). ...

Risk and Protective Factors for Traumatic Stress Disorders

... Following previous approaches (Kho et al., 2015;Street et al., 2003), we first compared the saturated model presented in the introduction (Fig. 1) to three mediator models based on commonly used fit indices (West et al., 2012; Table 3). The greater parsimony and overall better fit of our proposed mediated model in which there was no direct path from teachers' attitudes toward differentiated reading instruction to their perceived implementation success made it the most preferable model for our data (Table 3). ...

The Associations Among Male - Perpetrated Partner Violence, Wives’ Psychological Distress and Children’s Behavior Problems: A Structural Equation Modeling Analysis
  • Citing Article
  • December 2003

Journal of Comparative Family Studies

... Several studies (D. W. King et al., 2015;Lahav et al., 2016;Solomon & Dekel, 2007) specifically discuss the possibility of posttraumatic growth in ex-POWs. ...

Positive Adjustment Among American Repatriated Prisoners of the Vietnam War: Modeling the Long-Term Effects of Captivity

Clinical Psychological Science