Courage, camaraderie and compassion: a qualitative exploration into UK military veterans' experiences of self-compassion within the context of alcohol use disorders and recovery.

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Lisa Jane Barrington, A R Bland, J Keenan
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Abstract

Introduction: UK veterans are at increased risk of mental health and alcohol use disorders (AUDs), experiencing specific challenges such as combat exposure and re-integration which may contribute to treatment barriers. Experiences of shame and AUDs, which may precede or become exacerbated during military service, may be mitigated by self-compassion (SC). This study sought to understand how UK veterans make sense of their SC experiences within the context of their relationships with alcohol and recovery.

Methods: Interpretative phenomenological analysis was used to interpret the SC experiences of five ex-military veterans (one female). Semistructured face-to-face interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim, with a double hermeneutic approach used to interpret meaningful issues which influenced participants' self-perceptions in relation to their alcohol use and wider social world.

Results: Two key themes were identified. 'Searching for Safety', which illustrated veterans' SC sense-making within the context of their evolving lifeworld and alcohol use, and 'Healing with Honour' which reflected the significance of purpose and identity within experiences of recovery and SC. Findings were interpreted through the lens of the six bipolar elements of SC, which identified SC as salient within veterans' experiences of AUD and recovery. Although experiences of SC were sometimes perceived as challenging or incongruent to military identity, this was influenced by positive reframing and meaning-making, supported by compassionate narratives and informed trusted relationships.

Conclusions: Veterans' AUD recovery and support-seeking may be impacted by the experience of SC and enhanced by the early implementation of acceptable and feasible interventions which draw on veterans' unique military identities and experience. This may include compassion-focussed interventions which reframe SC as fierce SC, peer support models and educational strategies which support healthcare professionals to understand and identify veterans' military experiences.

勇气,友情和同情:在酒精使用障碍和康复的背景下,对英国退伍军人自我同情经历的定性探索。
简介:英国退伍军人心理健康和酒精使用障碍(AUDs)的风险增加,经历了战斗暴露和重新融入社会等具体挑战,这可能导致治疗障碍。在服兵役期间,羞耻感和aud的经历可能发生或加剧,可通过自我同情(SC)减轻。这项研究试图了解英国退伍军人如何在他们与酒精和康复的关系的背景下理解他们的SC经历。方法:采用解释现象学分析方法对5名退役军人(1名女性)的SC体验进行分析。半结构化的面对面访谈被录音并逐字转录,采用双重解释学方法来解释影响参与者与饮酒和更广泛的社会世界有关的自我认知的有意义的问题。结果:确定了两个关键主题。“寻找安全”,这说明了退伍军人在他们不断发展的生活世界和酒精使用的背景下的SC意义构建,以及“荣誉治疗”,反映了目的和身份在康复和SC经历中的重要性。研究结果通过SC的六个双极元素来解释,这表明SC在退伍军人的AUD和康复经历中是突出的。虽然SC的经历有时被认为是具有挑战性的或与军事身份不一致的,但这受到积极的重构和意义创造的影响,受到富有同情心的叙述和知情的信任关系的支持。结论:退伍军人独特的军事身份和经历可能会影响退伍军人的AUD恢复和支持寻求,并通过早期实施可接受和可行的干预措施来增强退伍军人的支持寻求。这可能包括以同情为中心的干预措施,将退伍军人重新定义为激烈的退伍军人,同伴支持模式和教育策略,支持医疗保健专业人员理解和识别退伍军人的军事经历。
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
Bmj Military Health
Bmj Military Health MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
20.00%
发文量
116
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