Conventional Resilience and the Impact of Catastrophic Injury Exposure on Special Operations Surgical Teams.

Q3 Medicine
Erika Ann Jeschke, Jay B Baker, Jared Wyma-Bradley, John Dorsch, Sarah L Huffman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article presents a justification for using an ethnographic approach to research resilience. Our hypothesis is that the conventional resilience construct is ineffective in achieving its stated goal of mitigating diagnosable stress pathologies because it is grounded in a set of assumptions that overlook human experience when examining human performance in combat. To achieve this goal, we (1) describe the evolution of the strategic framework within which the conventional resilience construct is defined; (2) highlight certain limiting assumptions entailed in this framework; (3) explain how bottom-up ethnographic research relates the medic's practical performance to military requirements and mission capabilities; and (4) articulate the unique elements of our study that widen the aperture of the conventional resilience construct. We conclude by gesturing to initial research findings.

常规弹性和灾难性损伤暴露对特种作战外科团队的影响。
这篇文章提出了使用民族志方法来研究弹性的理由。我们的假设是,传统的弹性结构在实现减轻可诊断的压力病理的既定目标方面是无效的,因为它建立在一组假设的基础上,在检查人类在战斗中的表现时忽略了人类的经验。为了实现这一目标,我们(1)描述了定义传统弹性结构的战略框架的演变;(2)强调该框架所包含的某些限制性假设;(3)解释自下而上的民族志研究如何将军医的实际表现与军事需求和任务能力联系起来;(4)阐明我们研究的独特元素,扩大了传统弹性结构的范围。我们以初步研究结果作为结论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
91
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