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The role of personal value preferences in predicting army stress

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

E. Tartakovsky
Affiliation:
Tel-Aviv university, social work, Tel-Aviv, Israel
N. Rofe
Affiliation:
IDF, mental health, Tel-Aviv, Israel

Abstract

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Background

The military is a stressful environment, and many service persons experience army stress. Therefore, it is important to understand the factors affecting army stress and stress resiliency.

Objective

The present study examines the connections between personal value preferences and army stress, applying the value congruency paradigm.

Method

Male soldiers serving in three combat units in the Israeli Defense Forces participated in the study (n = 257).

Results

The results obtained demonstrated that personal value preferences explained a significant proportion of the variance in army stress beyond the socio-demographic variables. A lower stress level was associated with a higher preference for the values of societal security, conformity, achievement, and universalism, and with a lower preference for the face and personal security values.

Conclusions

The research promotes our understanding of the relationships between general motivational goals expressed in personal value preferences and stress in the military context. In addition, the results obtained indicate the possible relevance of using values for selecting and preparing recruits who will most likely adjust well to the army framework. Finally, some value-oriented interventions that may be used for promoting the soldiers’ psychological adjustment during their army service are suggested.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster Walk: Posttraumatic stress disorder; Women, gender and mental health
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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