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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2018 May 1.
Published in final edited form as: Anxiety Stress Coping. 2016 Sep 17;30(3):347–363. doi: 10.1080/10615806.2016.1228900

Table 1.

Descriptive Data and Interrelations among Coping Strategies and PTSD Symptom Clusters

1 2 3 4 5 6 7
1. Social Support Coping -- .25*** .03 .06 −.02 .03 .11*
2. Problem Solving Coping .24*** -- .21*** .06 .03 .06 .02
3. Avoidance Coping .01 .21*** -- .32*** .30*** .41*** .23***
4. Intrusion PTSD Symptoms .03 .05 .20*** -- .61*** .56*** .54***
5. Avoidance PTSD Symptoms −.04 .02 .21*** .54*** -- .50*** .48***
6. Numbing PTSD Symptoms .002 .03 .33*** .48*** .43*** -- .60***
7. Arousal PTSD Symptoms .10 .01 .14** .47*** .42*** .56*** --

    M 12.11 19.38 23.28 4.54 2.51 4.80 6.96
    SD 3.52 3.63 4.37 3.65 2.00 3.66 3.79

Note. PTSD = Posttraumatic stress disorder. Zero-order correlations appear above the diagonal and partial correlations (controlling for past-year income, employment, living with partner [yes = 1, no = 0], mean days of face-to-face contact, and past six-month physical intimate partner violence victimization) appear below the diagonal.

*

p < .05.

**

p ≤ .01.

***

p ≤ .001.