PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms and television viewing patterns in the Nurses' Health Study II: A longitudinal analysis.

  • Sun Jae Jung,
  • Ashley Winning,
  • Andrea L Roberts,
  • Kristen Nishimi,
  • Qixuan Chen,
  • Paola Gilsanz,
  • Jennifer A Sumner,
  • Cristina A Fernandez,
  • Eric B Rimm,
  • Laura D Kubzansky,
  • Karestan C Koenen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213441
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
p. e0213441

Abstract

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IntroductionThe relation between TV viewing and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is controversial; prior work focused exclusively on whether TV viewing of disaster events constitutes a traumatic stressor that causes PTSD. This study evaluates a possible bidirectional relation between PTSD and TV viewing in community-dwelling women.MethodsData are from the PTSD subsample of the Nurses' Health II study, an ongoing prospective study of women aged 24-42 years at enrollment and who have been followed biennially (N = 50,020). Trauma exposure and PTSD symptoms (including date of onset) were assessed via the Brief Trauma Questionnaire and the Short Screening Scale for DSM-IV PTSD. Average TV viewing was reported at 5 times over 18 years of follow-up. Linear mixed models assessed differences in TV viewing patterns by trauma/PTSD status. Among women with trauma/PTSD onset during follow-up (N = 14,374), linear spline mixed models assessed differences in TV viewing patterns before and after PTSD onset.ResultsWomen with high PTSD symptoms reported more TV viewing (hours/wk) compared to trauma-unexposed women at all follow-up assessments (β = 0.14, SE = 0.01, p ConclusionsTV viewing following trauma exposure may be a marker of vulnerability for developing PTSD and also a consequence of having PTSD. High TV viewing levels may be linked with ineffective coping strategies or social isolation, which increase risk of developing PTSD.