重返社会之路:美国空军伤病员的状况和持续支持。

Rand health quarterly Pub Date : 2024-03-04 eCollection Date: 2024-03-01
Carra S Sims, Christine Anne Vaughan, John A Hamm, Brent Anderson, Angela Clague
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国空军请兰德公司的 "空军项目"(PAF)帮助评估其伤员的福祉以及为促进其康复和重返社会而提供的服务质量。RAND PAF 在 2016 年秋季进行了一项实地调查,以评估受伤空军人员在身体健康、心理健康、人际关系、失业和财务状况等领域的功能,以及他们对空军为受伤空军人员提供的非医疗项目的利用情况和看法。这项研究的作者邀请所有参加空军 "受伤勇士 "计划的 713 名受伤飞行员完成调查,有 270 名飞行员(38%)完成了调查。三分之一的飞行员表示在获得身体或心理健康护理方面存在困难,四分之一的飞行员对护理协调表示不满。报告在身体和精神健康状况护理方面遇到障碍的飞行员比例相似。难以安排预约是这两类疾病最常见的障碍。报告潜在社会支持不足、失业和财务问题的空军人员比例虽小,但也很明显。对于空军的许多受伤飞行员项目,超过 80% 的项目用户对项目总体表示满意。作者建议空军考虑将重点放在改善护理协调、提高医疗保健系统能力、继续提供就业援助以及改善参与率较低项目的营销方面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Road to Reintegration: Status and Continuing Support of the U.S. Air Force's Wounded, Ill, and Injured.

The U.S. Air Force asked RAND Project AIR FORCE (PAF) to help assess the well-being of its wounded members and the quality of services provided to facilitate their recovery and reintegration. RAND PAF fielded a survey in the fall of 2016 to assess wounded airmen's functioning in the domains of physical health, mental health, interpersonal relationships, unemployment, and financial status, as well as their utilization and perceptions of Air Force nonmedical programs for wounded airmen. The authors of this study invited all 713 wounded airmen enrolled in the Air Force Wounded Warrior program to complete the survey, and 270 airmen (38 percent) completed it. One-third of airmen reported difficulty obtaining care for physical or mental health conditions, and one-quarter expressed dissatisfaction with coordination of care. Similar proportions of airmen reported barriers to care for physical and mental health conditions. Difficulty scheduling appointments was the most commonly endorsed barrier for both types of conditions. Small but notable proportions of airmen reported potential social support deficits, unemployment, and financial problems. For many of the Air Force's programs for wounded airmen, over 80 percent of program users reported overall program satisfaction. The authors recommend that the Air Force consider focusing on improving care coordination, increasing health care system capacity, continuing employment assistance, and improving marketing of programs with low uptake.

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