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Original Articles

Brief report: The relationship between post‐traumatic stress disorder symptoms and overgeneral autobiographical memory in older adults

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Pages 26-30 | Received 05 Apr 2012, Accepted 09 Sep 2012, Published online: 09 Nov 2020
 

Abstract

Objective

The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between post‐traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and autobiographical memory specificity in older adults.

Method

Older adult trauma survivors (N = 23) completed the Autobiographical Memory Test, Posttraumatic Stress Diagnostic Scale, and Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination‐Revised.

Results

When cognitive ability was partialled out, the relationship between PTSD symptoms and reduced autobiographical memory specificity was significant. Specifically, the relationships between reliving symptoms and avoidance symptoms correlated significantly with reduced autobiographical memory specificity. There was no significant relationship between hyperarousal symptoms and reduced autobiographical memory specificity.

Conclusions

The findings suggest that similar to other populations, PTSD symptoms are also associated with reduced autobiographical memory specificity in older adults.

Abstract

Funding: Laura A. Jobson is funded by a Postdoctoral Research Fellowship award from the National Institute for Health Research. No other funding was received and neither author declares any industrial links or affiliations.

Conflict of interest: None.

This research was undertaken as part of a Doctorate in Clinical Psychology at the University of East Anglia, UK.

Funding: Laura A. Jobson is funded by a Postdoctoral Research Fellowship award from the National Institute for Health Research. No other funding was received and neither author declares any industrial links or affiliations.

Conflict of interest: None.

This research was undertaken as part of a Doctorate in Clinical Psychology at the University of East Anglia, UK.

Notes

Funding: Laura A. Jobson is funded by a Postdoctoral Research Fellowship award from the National Institute for Health Research. No other funding was received and neither author declares any industrial links or affiliations.

Conflict of interest: None.

This research was undertaken as part of a Doctorate in Clinical Psychology at the University of East Anglia, UK.

1. The relationships between ACE‐R and AMS in response to the positive, r(21) = .50, p < .01, and negative, r(21) = .35, p = .05, cues were significant. Partial correlations found that for positive cues, the correlations between AMS and total PTSD symptoms, r(20) = −.40, p = .03, and reliving symptoms, r(20) = −.43, p = .02, were significant. The relationship between AMS and avoidance symptoms was approaching significance, r(20) = −.29, p = .09. There was no significant relationship between hyperarousal symptoms and AMS, r(20) = −.25, p = .13. For the negative cue words, the correlations between AMS and total PTSD symptoms, r(20) = −.36, p = .05, reliving symptoms, r(20) = −.52, p < .01, and avoidance symptoms, r(20) = −.45, p = .02, were all significant. There was no significant relationship between hyperarousal symptoms and AMS, r(20) = .09, p = .35 (all one‐tailed correlations).

Additional information

Funding

National Institute for Health Research

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