Risk and Resilience Factors - Humanities
Resilience factors, such as a strong social support system, can contribute to a soldiers ability to cope with traumatic events during deployment and can ultimately facilitate his or her readjustment upon returning home. Similarly, risk factors, such as prior exposure to trauma, can be detrimental to a soldiers ability to cope during deployment and can impair his or her readjustment upon returning home. There are exceptions, of course. For example, even the most resilient soldier can be pushed beyond his or her capacity to cope with a traumatic event. Conversely, a soldier who exhibits risk factors will not necessarily develop a psychological disorder. This is why assessment is critical at all stages of a soldiers exposure to combat and war.In this Assignment, you will analyze risk and resilience factors associated with soldiers in two case studies. Then, based on your analysis, you will determine which soldier might have a greater risk for developing a combat-related psychological disorder.To prepare for this Assignment:Pay particular attention to specific risk and resilience factors related to pre-deployment background, deployment-related experiences and perceptions, and post-deployment events and circumstances.Focus on pre-deployment, war-zone, and post-deployment risk and resilience factors. Consider the relationship between risk and resilience factors and posttraumatic stress symptomology.Review the Week 8 Case Studies. Reflect on each specialists social support system and exposure to trauma before, during, and after deployment. Also, consider the living and working conditions and combat experiences of each specialist during deployment.Identify risk and resilience factors related to pre-deployment, deployment, and post-deployment for both specialists in the case studies.Based on each specialists risk and resilience factors, consider who might have a greater risk for developing a combat-related psychological disorder and why.The Assignment: (1–2 pages)Analyze the risk and resilience factors in each Case Study. Include a brief description of each factor and explain why you think each is a risk or resilience factor.Based on your analysis, explain which of the two combat veterans you think might have a greater risk for developing a combat-related psychological disorder and why. Be specific.Support your Assignment with specific references to all resources used in its preparation
week_8__assignment_case_studies.pdf
what_is_its_effect_on_stress_in_the_military.pdf
combat_and_interpersonal_trauma_on_ptsd_.pdf
deployment_risk_and_resilience_inventory.pdf
combat_related_posttraumatic_stress_disorder_.pdf
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Week 8: Assignment Case Studies
Case Study #1
Specialist Ramirez—U.S. Army
Specialist Ramirez joined the Army a week after he turned 21. Before he left for basic training,
his wife, parents, and many of his neighbors celebrated his patriotism at a backyard barbecue.
After completing basic training, Ramirez was deployed to Iraq with the 4th Infantry Division and
assigned to a combat team. The soldiers on Ramirez’s combat team formed a strong bond and
trusted each other with their lives on a daily basis. Although it was rarely stated, they all knew
they could depend on each other in the worst of circumstances. Ramirez and his team
routinely engaged in combat patrols that were long, hot, and stressful and had endured several
firefights with Iraqi insurgents within 3 months of their arrival in Iraq.
One day, Ramirez was driving a Humvee in a convoy when an IED (improvised explosive
device) detonated, destroying the Humvee ahead of him. The severed arm of one of his
comrades flew back, hitting the hood of his vehicle. A few minutes later, he learned that two of
his comrades were killed in the explosion. In the days and weeks after the explosion, Ramirez
felt he was in constant danger and doubted he would survive his deployment. Also, he worried
about how his young wife was coping with living alone off-post back home. Her frequent letters
when he was first deployed had dwindled to two or three per month.
Ramirez returned to the United States after a 16-month deployment in Iraq. He and his
comrades went through a reintegration screening at Fort Hood upon their return. Although his
deployment had strained his relationship with his wife, within a month of his homecoming, their
relationship was back to normal. Third graders from his old elementary school sent cards and
letters showing their appreciation for his service. His father visited, listening quietly while
Ramirez described some of his experiences in Iraq. Three months after his return, he reported
for rescreening by the Army for medical and psychological problems, which yielded no
significant findings except for minor problems concentrating on the day-to-day demands of life
at home.
Case Study #2
Specialist Johnson—U.S. Army
Specialist Johnson joined the Army at age 20, after being displaced from New Orleans to
Houston following Hurricane Katrina. He had been living on his own since his parents divorced
2 years earlier. It was raining in Texas the day he left for basic training. After completing basic
training, Johnson was deployed to Iraq with the 4th Infantry Division. He was assigned as the
driver for a Public Affairs Major who routinely visited various neighborhoods in Baghdad and
other Iraqi cities. The Major was often tough on Johnson, and Johnson thought the Major was
overly critical. At the end of each day, Johnson was grateful to return to his bunk and relative
safety inside the Green Zone, a U.S.-occupied and heavily guarded area of Baghdad.
Other than small arms fire in the distance, Johnson never faced any direct combat. One day,
he and the Major went into Baghdad to visit a family who had reported the death of their
daughter. When they arrived at the family home, what they presumed to be the body of the
missing daughter lay in the street in front of the house. Her burned body was almost
© 2014 Laureate Education, Inc.
Page 1 of 2
unrecognizable as human. Following this incident, Johnson met with a combat stress
counselor in the Green Zone to discuss the experience.
Johnson returned to the United States after a 16-month deployment. He went through a
reintegration screening at Fort Hood with no significant findings. Once on leave, he visited his
old neighborhood in New Orleans. Some of his neighbors had rebuilt their homes, and some
were still living in FEMA trailers. Many others had never returned after the hurricane. Three
months after his return to the United States, Johnson reported for rescreening by the Army for
medical and psychological problems. While he denied stressors related to his deployment in
Iraq, he did report feeling uneasy after his leave in New Orleans.
© 2014 Laureate Education, Inc.
Page 2 of 2
MILITARY MEDICINE. 172, 9;931. 2007
Culture: What Is Its Effect on Stress in the Military?
Guarantor: Surgeon Commander Neil Greenberg
Contributors: Victoria Langston, BSc (Hons)*; Matthew Gould, DClin Psychf; Surgeon Commander Neil GreenbergI
Culture provides the unwritten rules that inform and shape
expected behaviors. To date, little research has been conducted into the attitudes or opinions that service personnel
hold toward mental health issues. This article examines current literature and research into the recognition of mental
health problems in the military and potential organizational
barriers to care including stigma and the specific characteristics of a military culture such as the significant reliance on
buddy support. We conclude that the barriers to care which
operate in both military and civilian populations are not insignificant. Westem militaries in fact currently face an uphill
struggle to combat the substantial barriers to care that exist.
sors. such as length of deployment or exposure to adverse living
condition, may exacerbate the effects of traumatic stress. In
this section, relevant research on the two different types of
stressors will be discussed.
Studies have shown that the degree of psychological trauma
from operational duties is proportionally related to the type of
warfare fought.^ One of the adverse outcomes of wartime trauma
is PTSD. Rates of PTSD in combat veterans have been measured
on numerous occasions and vary from 15 to 31\%.* These rates
are in excess of the 2 to 3\% prevalence of PTSD symptoms
recorded in the U.K. general population.^ However, focusing on
PTSD alone may not give the full picture of operationally induced psychological distress. For instance, it has been reported
that up to 50\% of Falkland War veterans have symptoms of
PTSD even though they may not have sufficient or intense
enough symptoms to warrant a formal diagnosis of PTSD. ^
Introduction
ilitary personnel are at a high risk of exposure to potenM
tially traumatic events. As such, this makes them an atrisk group who are vulnerable to suffering from psychological
distress and mental health problems including depression, family violence, substance abuse, and post-traumatic stress disorder [PTSD). all of which are problems for the militaiy services
and a threat to occupational functionality. The impact of mental health on decision making is especially of significance given
the high technology, fast-paced warfare of the 21 st century, the
battlefield which leaves little margin for error. Furthermore,
many military forces have to cope with increasingly complicated
conflicts with an ever decreasing number of soldiers available to
fulfill these duties.^ Troops therefore need to function at peak
efficiency and inefficiencies imposed by work stress and mental
health problems may have very serious consequences.-^
Recent claims from soldiers and commanders inside the theaters of Iraq and Afghanistan have raised questions about the
state of mental health in the U.K. military.^ This article attempts to explore the issue of militaiy culture in relation to
stress (traumatic or otherwise) and examines how the military
environment may exacerbate psychological problems because of
barriers to care including stigma.
The Different Types of Stressors within a
Military Environment
The potential of being exposed to traumatic stressors is an
ever present issue for individuals who choose the military as
their occupation. Furthermore, additional work-related stres•Research Worker. Kings Centre for Miiitary Health Researcii. Kings Coiiege London. Weston Education Centre. iO Cutcombe Road. London. SE5 9f41, U.K.
tTralnee Ciinicai Psychoiogist. Royal Holloway. University of London. Eghatn. Surrey TW20 OEX. U.K.
tSenior Lecturer, Military Psychiatiy, Kings Centre for Militaiy Health Research.
Kings Coiiege London, Weston Education Centre, iO Cutcomi)e Road, ix)ndon. SE5
9RJ U.K,
This manuscript was received for review In June 2006. The revised manuscript was
accepted for pubilcation in Aprii 2007.
Reprint & Copyright © by Association of Militaiy Surgeons of U.S,. 2007.
Some of Uie variation in rates of PTSD and prevalence of
traumatic stress symptoms may be accounted for by differences
in study design. For instance, there are many types of instruments used to measure PTSD and many different ways of classifying military missions. Furthermore, questionnaires usually overestimate the prevalence of psychiatric conditions.^
Studies which use semistructured instruments such as the
Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale are likely to give a better
estimate of the true prevalence figure. Studies also vary in their
use of terminology and it is important to remember that suffering with PTSD symptoms does not always prevent individuals
from working or having fulfilling social bves. Symptoms are not
the same as disorder, although it would be foolish to merely
dismiss subdiagnostic symptoms as being irrelevant: they may
well affect quality of life.
Aside from operationally related traumatic stress, there are
numerous other work-related stressors which significantly affeet the lives of service personnel. Pflanz et al. investigated
sources of stress and their prevalence in the U.S. military. Significant work stress was reported by 26\% of troops and another
15\% described significant emotional distress related to work
stressors. The study revealed that being in combat, exposure to
heavy casualties, and unexpected deployments all correlated
with increased levels of psychological distress.*
Mental disorders, whether they are the result of traumatic or
work stressors, appear to have had a significant impact on
manpower and retention rates. Hoge et al. conducted a population-based analysis of hospitalizations occurring at U.S. military medical facilities between 1990 and 1999 among active
duty personnel. Results showed that mental disorders were the
leading cause of medical discharge among men and the second
leading category among women, accounting for 13\% of all hospitalizations. Overall, 23\% of all inpatient bed days were attributed to mental disorders.
The significant costs involved in recruiting, training, and retaining military personnel make it important to identify robust
931
Military Medicine. Vol. 172, September 2007
Culture and Its Effect on Stress in the Military
932
psychological support systems to avoid the loss of valuable
personnel to the effects of psychological trauma.^ From an organizational perspective therefore, the military have a moral and
legal duty to consider the psychological welfare of their workforce.^ However, significant organizational obstacles and barriers to care must be overcome in order for such systems to be
worthwhile.^ Not only must any support given be effective, but it
is also important to ensure that those in need of help feel able to
come forward and ask for it or at the very least receive it, even if
they feel too ashamed or embarrassed to ask for help themselves. These barriers to care will be further examined later.
The Importance of Morale and
Homecoming Experience
Interestingly, it appears that the level of stress felt by personnel is reflected by the nations attitudes toward the military as
well as unit morale. It has been suggested that one of the reasons for the poor psychological condition of many of American
Vietnam veterans was the hostile attitude that many of their
fellow countrymen took toward the war in the late 1960s and
1970s.^^ The converse also appears to be true in that lower
levels of distress were reported by U.S. peacekeepers following a
positive homecoming experience. ^ Labuc* highlighted how morale in the army correlates with the incidence of combat stress
reactions: after analyzing a number of campaigns by Israeli and
British soldiers, he comments: It can be seen that when morale
is high stress casualties are Iow, and \1ce versa.^ He argues
that unit cohesion and suppori are important factors which
determine morale and can therefore influence the psychological
state of those personnel who serve within a unit. Thus, when a
military force can foster high morale among troops, the likelihood of that force suffering substantial numbers of stress casualties is lower. An example of this was the Falklands War, where
morale was high and the stress casualty rate was in the region
of 4\%. However, the Malta campaign of 1942 was associated
with low morale in the British troops and as a result, the number of stress casualties was substantial, estimated as at least
25\% of the deployed force. ^ This may have been as a result of
varying factors including poor leadership, extensive physical
hardship, and physical casualties.
Culture and Stigma: What Significance Do These
Factors Hold in a Military Context?
In this section, the significance of stigma toward help-seeking
behaviors will be discussed within the context of military culture. Culture itself provides the unwritten rules that inform and
shape expected behaviors and can be defined as a way of liie that
is leamed and shared by human beings and is taught by one
generation to the next.
Stigma is one of several reasons that might help to explain the
behavioral choices people make toward mental health care; one
defmition of stigma is a sign of disgrace or discredit which sets
a person apart from others.^ The consequences of stigma associated with mental illness are well cited. Stigma may occur at all
stages of mental illness from help-seeking to treatment and
discharge and has been commented as being more devastating, life-limiting and long-lasting than the primary illness,
Miiitary Medicine. Vol. 172. September 2007
meaning that the effects of stigma can often be felt long after the
original problems have disappeared.^ According to the World
Health Organization: The single most important barrier to overcome in the community is the stigma and associated discrimination toward persons suffering from mental and behavioral
disorders.^ Stigma based on Goffmans^^ notion of spoiled
identity refers to a discrediting social attitude toward mental
illness. For example, Britt^ investigated the stigma of psychological problems among active service personnel returning from
the U.S. peacekeeping mission in Bosnia. He found that admitting to a psychological problem was much more stigmatizing
than admitting to a medical problem and personnel were much
less likely to follow through with a psychological referral than
with a medical referral.^ More than one-half of the participants
believed that their career would be affected if they disclosed
a psychological problem and almost half felt that admitting to a
psychological problem would cause a coworker to maintain a
distance from the service member.^-
In 2002. a number of ex-service personnel brought a court
case against the Ministry of Defence for the failure to identify
PTSD issues at an early stage and to provide support and effective treatment.^ Stigma was a continual theme throughout the
proceedings: the case was both lengthy and costly. The judgment was found in favor of the Ministry of Defence, although in
coming to his ruling. Justice Owen stated: There can be no
doubt that .. . there was a stigma attached to psychiatric/
psychological disorder. It was seen to be a sign of weakness
which, if revealed, would expose an individual to ridicule, and
would be the kiss of death to a military career.^^
Discrimination in comparison refers to unfair treatment of
people with mental health problems which results in the denial
of the justified rights and responsibilities of a particular organization on an interpersonal or institutional level.^* For example, recently, a staff sergeant in the U.S. forces was initially
charged with cowardice after he attempted to seek help for a
comb^at stress reaction, although these charges were later
dropped and resulted in the individual voluntarily leaving the
army.
Westem culture has become more accepting and less stigmatizing of mental health problems in recent years.^ However,
many aspects of military life remain potentially prostigmatic.
For instance, military culture encourages mutual support between personnel, known as the buddy system which encourages individuals to learn to closely rely on each other, both for
physical and potentially psychological needs, when deployed or
otherwise.^^ In a study surveying U.K. peacekeepers, 98\% of
personnel felt able to talk to military friends or peers in the same
deployment and only 8\% had used formal suppori networks
(such as the use of medical or welfare services). Furthennore,
only 15\% had spoken to the chain of command about their
experiences.^^ Notably for most participants, there was a significant association between talking about their experiences and
having lower psychological distress scores.^^
However, the buddy system can be a hindrance when ones
close community cannot provide the necessary support. A distressed indi\idual may feel that they have let themselves and
their buddies down if they ask for help outside of their peer
group tthose who challenge any culture are often ostracized by
those who strongly identify with it^). In Greenberg et al.s^^
Culture and Its Effect on Stress in the Military
933
study, older peacekeepers were significantly less favorable to the by their peers. Although the majority considered it acceptable to
concept of formal debriefing for all. probably representing an sufter from stress, they did not trust that others would have the
old school approach of not talking about distress, often de- same view and therefore said that they did not and would not
scribed as the stiff upper lip. Greenberg further suggests that disclose their difficulties.^ It is noteworthy that the response
the results also show that older peacekeepers are more likely to rate in this study was approximately 50\% and it is possible that
make use of social networks and the chain of command and the views reported may be heavily subject to response bias.
thus may not feel that any formal sources of support are required.^^ This is especially important, as experienced and senior
The Management of Stress and Stigma
personnel are likely to influence the attitudes and help-seeking
behavior of others in their command. The close community.
The management of both traumatic and work stress has
reliant on mutual support, therefore, may act as a hindrance proved a difficult and controversial topic within both civilian and
acting as an organizational barrier that prevents personnel from military settings. In particular, the military is a challenging
using appropriate support and mental health care to fit in with environment in which to provide any medical and psychological
the existing military culture ethos.
treatment. Numerous physical barriers to care exist on operaHoge et al. investigated help-seeking and barriers to care tions such as logistical constraints, difficult terrain, a wide disamong U.S. soldiere and Marines after deployments to Iraq and persal of personnel, limited practitioners, and hostility to outAfghanistan. Personnel completed a questionnaire which in- siders. This section does not aim to be exhaustive, but aims
cluded an expanded version of a stigma rating scale developed rather to outline some of the key features in the treatment of
earlier by Britt^^ along with a range of medical and psychological stress including front-line treatment, single session psychologscreening measures. Findings indicated that of those who ical debriefmg, and intervention programs.
The most widely accepted treatment for battlefield combat
seored above the cutoff on screening for outcomes, including
major depression, generalized anxiety, and PTSD, only 38 to stress reactions is front-li ...
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