The Mask of the Warrior: unraveling deep-seated health vulnerabilities in veteran identities.

IF 2 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
Frontiers in Sociology Pub Date : 2024-10-04 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fsoc.2024.1389924
Jan Grimell
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

As service members transition from deployment to civilian life, they are also expected to reintegrate into society. An important part of this process is to "soften up" veteran or warrior identities and open up the self for both existing and new identities, mindsets, and ways of life. Past research has shown that the warrior mindset, in particular, can have negative health implications in the long run. The mindset can be costly, not only for the individual and their loved ones, but also for the healthcare services and other agencies. This article draws from a recent interview study with 24 deployed Swedish veterans suffering from deteriorating mental health without receiving a clinical diagnosis. Purposeful sampling was conducted with the support of the medical staff at the Veterans' Clinic at Uppsala University Hospital. Participants had been screened for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) but had not received a clinical diagnosis. This constitutes a large and understudied patient group in the clinic. The medical staff selected patients based on the following criteria: deteriorating mental health, increased suffering related to PTSD symptoms, and issues related to moral issues, existential concerns, and identity. The sample included veterans from both the Swedish Armed Forces and other deploying agencies. Of the 24 interviewees, 19 were from the Swedish Armed Forces (16 men and three women), and five (four women and one man) were deployed by other agencies. The number of overseas deployments varied widely, with some interviewees having completed 1-2 deployments, while others had completed 3-8. Additionally, some interviewees had interrupted planned or ongoing deployments for various reasons. At the time of the interviews, none were serving full-time in the armed forces; all were veterans. The interviews took place during an intense wave of COVID-19 infections in Sweden in early 2022, so the majority were conducted via videoconference. The participants' veteran identities were abductively analyzed through the mask of secrecy, the stoic mask, and the mask of denial, which are elements of the "Mask of the Warrior." This mask functions to safeguard mission focus, to endure, to execute tasks in extremely stressful situations, and to solve operational tasks during deployments and combat operations. The analysis of the interviews suggests that certain elements in these powerful veteran identities can serve as breeding grounds for suffering later in life. The veterans in the study tended to be stoic about their deteriorating mental health, kept the suffering to themselves, and denied the harmful aspects of their deployments. Thus, the Mask of the Warrior played a counterproductive role for the individual, their friends and family, and life in the aftermath of deployments. Another implication of secrecy and denial occurred on the societal or macro and system levels due to the absence of sufficient insight, knowledge, and understanding of veterans among personnel within the healthcare system and other agencies. This made it difficult for the healthcare system, and other relevant agencies, to offer adequate care and to understand the participants' health issues during sick leave. The perceived absence of societal and organizational rewards and benefits for veterans who risk their mental health and lives during deployment can be seen as a failing implicit work contract. This lack of recognition may lead to the corrosion of character.

战士的面具:揭开退伍军人身份中根深蒂固的健康弱点。
当军人从部署过渡到平民生活时,他们还要重新融入社会。这一过程的一个重要部分就是 "软化 "退伍军人或战士的身份,为现有的和新的身份、心态和生活方式打开自我。过去的研究表明,从长远来看,战士心态尤其会对健康产生负面影响。这种心态不仅会让个人及其亲人付出高昂的代价,也会让医疗保健服务和其他机构付出高昂的代价。本文借鉴了最近对 24 名被部署的瑞典退伍军人进行的访谈研究,这些退伍军人的心理健康状况不断恶化,但却没有得到临床诊断。在乌普萨拉大学医院退伍军人诊所医务人员的支持下,进行了有目的的抽样调查。参与者已接受创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)筛查,但未得到临床诊断。这构成了该诊所中一个庞大且未得到充分研究的患者群体。医务人员根据以下标准选择患者:精神健康状况恶化、创伤后应激障碍症状导致的痛苦增加,以及与道德问题、生存问题和身份认同相关的问题。样本包括来自瑞典武装部队和其他部署机构的退伍军人。在 24 名受访者中,19 人来自瑞典武装部队(16 名男性和 3 名女性),5 人(4 名女性和 1 名男性)由其他机构部署。海外部署的次数差别很大,有些受访者完成了 1-2 次部署,有些则完成了 3-8 次。此外,一些受访者由于各种原因中断了计划中或正在进行的部署。在访谈时,受访者中没有人在军队中全职服役;所有受访者都是退伍军人。访谈是在 2022 年初瑞典 COVID-19 感染高峰期间进行的,因此大部分访谈是通过视频会议进行的。通过 "战士面具 "中的保密面具、委曲求全面具和否认面具,对参与者的退伍军人身份进行了绑架式分析。在部署和作战行动中,这种面具的功能是保护任务重点、忍耐、在极度紧张的情况下执行任务,以及解决作战任务。对访谈的分析表明,这些强大的退伍军人身份中的某些元素可能成为日后痛苦的温床。研究中的退伍军人往往对自己日益恶化的精神健康状况采取委曲求全的态度,将痛苦藏在心底,并否认其部署过程中的有害方面。因此,"勇士面具 "对个人、其朋友和家人以及部署后的生活起到了适得其反的作用。由于医疗系统和其他机构的工作人员对退伍军人缺乏足够的洞察力、了解和理解,保密和否认的另一个影响发生在社会或宏观和系统层面。这使得医疗系统和其他相关机构难以提供足够的护理,也难以理解参与者在病假期间的健康问题。退伍军人在部署期间冒着心理健康和生命危险,但他们却没有得到社会和组织的奖励和福利,这可以被视为隐性工作契约的失败。这种不认可可能会导致人格的腐蚀。
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
Frontiers in Sociology
Frontiers in Sociology Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
4.00%
发文量
198
审稿时长
14 weeks
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