U.S. Army Medical Department journal
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Team members of a US Army medical combat stress control unit provided critical event debriefings for military personnel who were directly involved in a traumatic event during Operation Iraqi Freedom II. Each person attending the debriefing was then given a short 5-question survey immediately following the session. ⋯ This particular combat stress control team was located in Taji, Iraq. The data was collected from debriefings conducted from the beginning of March 2004 to mid-January 2005.
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The current combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan have involved US military personnel in major ground combat and hazardous security duty. Studies are needed to systematically assess the mental health of members of the armed services who have participated in these operations and to inform policy with regard to the optimal delivery of mental health care to returning veterans. ⋯ This study provides an initial look at the mental health of members of the Army and the Marine Corps who were involved in combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Our findings indicate that among the study groups there was a significant risk of mental health problems and that the subjects reported important barriers to receiving mental health services, particularly the perception of stigma among those most in need of such care. The recent military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, which have involved the first sustained ground combat undertaken by the United States since the war in Vietnam, raise important questions about the effect of the experience on the mental health of members of the military services who have been deployed there. Research conducted after other military conflicts has shown that deployment stressors and exposure to combat result in considerable risks of mental health problems, including posttraumatic stress disorder, major depression, substance abuse, impairment in social functioning and in the ability to work, and the increased use of healthcare services. One study that was conducted just before the military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan began found that at least 6% of all US military service members on active duty receive treatment for a mental disorder each year. Given the ongoing military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, mental disorders are likely to remain an important healthcare concern among those serving there. Many gaps exist in the understanding of the full psychosocial effect of combat. The all-volunteer force deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan and the type of warfare conducted in these regions are very different from those involved in past wars, differences that highlight the need for studies of members of the armed services who are involved in the current operations. Most studies that have examined the effects of combat on mental health were conducted among veterans years after their military service had ended. A problem in the methods of such studies is the long recall period after exposure to combat. Very few studies have examined a broad range of mental health outcomes near to the time of subjects' deployment. Little of the existing research is useful in guiding policy with regard to how best to promote access to and the delivery of mental health care to members of the armed services. Although screening for mental health problems is now routine both before and after deployment and is encouraged in primary care settings, we are not aware of any studies that have assessed the use of mental health care, the perceived need for such care, and the perceived barriers to treatment among members of the military services before or after combat deployment. We studied the prevalence of mental health problems among members of the US armed services who were recruited from comparable combat units before or after their deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan. We identified the proportion of service members with mental health concerns who were not receiving care and the barriers they perceived to accessing and receiving such care.
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Deployed service members encounter greater stressors such as combat, separation from normal support groups, and high operational tempo in the Iraq theater of operations than in a stateside setting. Consequently, the services that behavioral health personnel provide during deployment include a wider breadth of activities than are tracked and provided in a US military medical treatment facility setting. ⋯ These behavioral health treatment and prevention activities performed in the Iraq theater of operations are a crucial part of the medical support provided to troops in a harsh environment. These activities serve as force multipliers and help conserve the fighting strength of combat troops.
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Warrior Resilience Training (WRT) is an educational class designed to enhance Warrior resilience, thriving, and posttraumatic growth for Soldiers deployed in Operation Iraqi Freedom. Warrior Resilience Training uses rational emotive behavior therapy (REBT), Army leadership principles, and positive psychology as a vehicle for students to apply resilient philosophies derived from Army Warrior Ethos, Stoic philosophy, and the survivor and resiliency literature. ⋯ Warrior Resilience Training rationale, curriculum, variants (like Warrior Family Resilience Training), and feedback are included, with suggestions as to how behavioral health providers and combat stress control teams might better integrate their services with leaders, chaplains, and commands to better market combat stress resiliency, reduce barriers to care, and promote force preservation. Informal analysis of class feedback from 1168 respondents regarding WRT reception and utilization is examined.