Refining the biopsychosocial model of trauma: vulnerability and social support as primary predictors of mental disorders in a clinical sample
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Objective
Biopsychosocial models recognize multiple determinants of post-trauma mental disorders, but their relative and interactive effects remain unclear. We quantified the independent contribution of traumatic event severity, preexisting vulnerability, social support, and coping capacity, and tested mediation pathways.
Methods
In a Brazilian clinical sample reporting traumatic or stressful events (N = 612), constructs were operationalized as composite scores and a dichotomous clinical outcome was derived from intake assessments. Logistic regression (n = 594) and structural equation modeling evaluated prediction and mediation.
Results
Vulnerability was the strongest risk factor (OR = 1.46, p < .001) and social support the main protective factor (OR = 0.60, p < .001). Traumatic event severity remained an independent predictor (OR = 1.39, p < .001), whereas coping capacity was not significant (OR = 0.94, p = .410). Discrimination was good (AUC = 0.80). Mediation indicated vulnerability reduced social support and coping capacity, with a significant indirect effect via social support.
Conclusions
Findings support a multifactorial model centered on a triad of vulnerability, social support, and traumatic exposure. Risk is shaped primarily by preexisting vulnerability and relational context, alongside a direct trauma effect, providing a clinically relevant framework for assessment and intervention.