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Korean Journal of School Psychology

The Effects of Intrusive Rumination on Post-traumatic Growth of High-risk Post-traumatic Stress of university students: Indirect effects of Emotional Approach Coping and Deliberate Rumination

Abstract

This study was conducted to identify the pathways leading to post-traumatic growth in post-traumatic stress-suffering high-risk university students. A research model that supplemented the model developed by Calhoun and Tedeschi (2006) was used in this study. The participants were 357 university students who had a traumatic experience. Stress-growth model verification showed that the paths from invasive rumination to intentional rumination to post-traumatic growth; from invasive rumination to an emotional approach coping to post-traumatic growth; and from invasive rumination to an emotional approach coping to intentional rumination to post-traumatic growth were significant. These results indicate that post-traumatic stress is the driving force for post-traumatic growth, past psychological pain drives present growth, and present psychological pain can drive future growth. Collectively, today’s university no longer think of stress as a negative concept, but rather, it is expected to be conceptualized and understood as a driving force that promotes growth.

keywords
high-risk post-traumatic stress, rumination, emotional approach coping strategy, post-traumatic growth
Submission Date
2022-01-03
Revised Date
2022-05-07
Accepted Date
2022-06-24

Korean Journal of School Psychology