The Exploration of the GWOT Combat Amputee's Experience With Longitudinal Care: A Qualitative Study.

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Alexander Pursel, Ryoma Nichols, Dan Evans, Kristina Lindquist
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Contemporary advances in combat medicine have allowed greater numbers of wounded service members to survive their injuries. An estimated 1,705 combat veterans sustained major lower or upper extremity amputations between 2001 and 2017 during the Global War on Terror. This study intends to answer the following question utilizing a qualitative study design: What were the common and abnormal experiences of the Global War on Terror combat amputees relative to their mechanism of injury, perception of injury, and systems of care utilized during their recovery and rehabilitation process?.

Methods: During the months of December 2022 and January 2023, individual semi-structured interviews were conducted with U.S. Marines that served in the Global War on Terror (total n = 10). Deductive and inductive approaches were employed to identify codes, themes, and meta-themes in the data.

Results: All participants deployed to Afghanistan between the years 2010 and 2014 and were assigned to the following military occupational specialties: Explosive Ordnance Disposal technicians (total n = 2); combat engineers (total n = 2); and infantrymen (total n = 6). Analysis of data collected from interviews highlighted these key observations: (1) Themes in the combat amputee experience include support, systems of care, and mindset and (2) the themes synergistically contribute to the meta-themes mental health and pain and vice versa. As all participants were subjected to a blast mechanism of injury, it is difficult to determine if this played a role in deviating rehabilitation and recovery processes. Perception of injury and how well participants adapted to their new lifestyle, meaning how optimistic they were, appeared to play a significant role in recovery. Participants had mixed feelings about the care they had received but generally spoke favorably of military hospitals and were frustrated with the Veteran Affairs, and there was no clear consensus on their relationship with civilian health care, though most participants chose to seek most of their care through the Veteran Affairs.

Conclusion: Based on the research question, this study found an intricate relationship between mental health, pain, and the experiences of the participants regarding their care and rehabilitation. However, the nature of qualitative research makes it impossible to determine generalizations that can be used to create meaningful change to address improving combat amputee veteran care. Further research into long-term health outcomes based on hypotheses not evaluated in existing literature would further improve the ability of health care providers to care for this unique patient population.

探索 GWOT 战斗截肢者的纵向护理经验:定性研究。
导言:当代作战医学的进步使更多的伤员得以幸存。在 2001 年至 2017 年的全球反恐战争期间,估计有 1 705 名退伍军人的下肢或上肢截肢。本研究旨在利用定性研究设计回答以下问题:全球反恐战争中截肢者在受伤机制、受伤感知以及恢复和康复过程中使用的护理系统方面有哪些常见和异常经历?在 2022 年 12 月和 2023 年 1 月期间,对参加过全球反恐战争的美国海军陆战队员(总人数 = 10 人)进行了个人半结构化访谈。采用演绎法和归纳法确定数据中的代码、主题和元主题:所有参与者均在 2010 年至 2014 年期间部署到阿富汗,并被分配到以下军事职业专业:爆炸物处理技术员(共 2 人)、战斗工兵(共 2 人)和步兵(共 6 人)。对访谈中收集到的数据进行分析后,我们得出了以下重要结论:(1) 战斗截肢者经历的主题包括支持、护理系统和心态;(2) 这些主题协同作用,共同促成了心理健康和疼痛这两个元主题,反之亦然。由于所有参与者都遭受了爆炸伤害,因此很难确定这是否在偏离的康复和恢复过程中起了作用。对受伤的看法以及参与者对新生活方式的适应程度,即他们的乐观程度,似乎对康复起着重要作用。虽然大多数参与者选择通过退伍军人事务部寻求大部分医疗服务,但他们与民间医疗服务的关系并没有明确的共识:根据研究问题,本研究发现心理健康、疼痛以及参与者在护理和康复方面的经历之间存在着错综复杂的关系。然而,由于定性研究的性质,我们无法确定可用于创造有意义的变革以改善战斗截肢退伍军人护理的概括性结论。根据现有文献中未评估的假设对长期健康结果进行进一步研究,将进一步提高医疗服务提供者护理这一特殊患者群体的能力。
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来源期刊
Military Medicine
Military Medicine MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
393
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Military Medicine is the official international journal of AMSUS. Articles published in the journal are peer-reviewed scientific papers, case reports, and editorials. The journal also publishes letters to the editor. The objective of the journal is to promote awareness of federal medicine by providing a forum for responsible discussion of common ideas and problems relevant to federal healthcare. Its mission is: To increase healthcare education by providing scientific and other information to its readers; to facilitate communication; and to offer a prestige publication for members’ writings.
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