Skip to main content
. 2019 Mar 25;60(8):875–884. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.13054

Table 2.

Hierarchical regression model predicting post‐traumatic stress severity on the CPSS at 2 months post‐trauma

Predictor variable (assessed at 2–4 weeks) Model Step Step 5
Adj. R 2 F test ΔR 2 F test B Bootstrapped 95% CI β
Step 1: Pretrauma factors .10 F 1,189 = 22.74, p < .0001 .10 F 1,190 = 22.74, p < .0001      
Emotional difficulties         −0.50 −0.87, −0.11 .16
Step 2: Trauma characteristics .17 F 3,187 = 13.57, p < .0001 .07 F 2,187 = 8.12, p < .0001      
Assault versus nonassault         3.07 0.10, 5.90 .12
Head injury         3.42 5.39,1.55 .17
Step 3: Peritrauma cognitive processing .42 F 8,182 = 18.12, p < .0001 .27 F 5,182 = 17.31, p < .0001      
Subjective threat         −0.30 −0.74, 0.15 −.08
Panic         0.57 −0.02, 1.16 .14
Data‐driven processing         0.20 0.00, 0.41 .13
Peritraumatic dissociation         0.08 −0.32, 51 .03
Peritraumatic pain         −0.79 −1.61, 0.13 −.09
Step 4: Post‐trauma psychosocial factors .43 F 11,179 = 13.87, p < .0001 .02 F 3,183 = 1.85, p = .14      
Adaptive processing         0.04 −.21, 0.29 .02
Ongoing pain         0.17 −1.08, 1.45 .02
Life stressors         −0.10 −0.99, 0.64 −.01
Step 5: Post‐trauma cognitive processing .64 F 15,175 = 23.59, p < .0001 .21 F 4,175 = 27.63, p < .0001      
Ongoing dissociation         0.87 .19, 1.57 .21
Memory quality (TMQQ)         0.11 −.09, 0.29 .07
Trauma‐related appraisals (CPTCI)         0.32 .19, 0.43 .48
Trauma‐related rumination         0.42 .13, 0.83 .12

Regression coefficients (B and β) where the 95% bootstrapped regression coefficient did not cross zero are highlighted in bold. CPSS, Child PTSD Symptom Scale; CPTCI, Child Post‐Traumatic Cognitions Inventory; TMQQ, Trauma Memory Quality Questionnaire.