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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Apr 4.
Published in final edited form as: J Trauma Stress. 2008 Aug;21(4):410–416. doi: 10.1002/jts.20350

Table 2.

Intercorrelations Between Study Variables

Study Measures 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1. Age .15 −.13 .01 −.15* −.10 .02 −.04 −.02 −.00
2. Prior trauma .01 −.14 −.11 .11 −.03 −.07 .14 .14
3. Trait anger baseline −.15* .01 −.07 −.02 −.08 .23** .19*
4. Self worth baseline .18* .02 −.05 .16* −.23** −.07
5. Sources of support baseline .00 .02 .49** −.02 −.07
6. Critical incident exposure 12 months .21** .02 −.02 .28**
7. Peritraumatic dissociation 12 months −.08 .00 .43**
8. Sources of support 12 months −.15* −.17*
9. State anger 12 months .51**
10. MCS

Note. Study measures: 1 = Age; 2 = prior trauma; 3 = trait anger baseline; 4 = self-worth baseline; 5 = sources of support baseline; 6 = critical incident exposure 12 months; 7 = peritraumatic dissociation 12 months; 8 = sources of support 12 months; 9 = state anger; 12 months; 10 = Mississippi Combat Scale-Civilian Version-modified (reversed and anger items removed).

*

p < .05.

**

p < .01.

***

p < .001.