Nina A Sayer, Robert J Orazem, Lauren L Mitchell, Kathleen F Carlson, Paula P Schnurr, Brett T Litz
{"title":"公众应该知道的退伍军人从战斗部署返回支持重返社会:定性分析。","authors":"Nina A Sayer, Robert J Orazem, Lauren L Mitchell, Kathleen F Carlson, Paula P Schnurr, Brett T Litz","doi":"10.1037/ort0000541","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Consensus reports have called for interventions to educate civilians about the reintegration challenges that veterans experience. The current study describes veterans' perspectives of what the public should know and what the public can do to help veterans reintegrate into civilian life. We conducted thematic analysis of written essays from a stratified random sample of 100 US veterans (half women, half deployed from National Guard or Reserves) from Afghanistan and Iraq military operations who had participated in the control writing condition from a randomized controlled trial of expressive writing to improve reintegration outcomes. Veterans described a military-civilian divide that makes reintegration difficult and recommended that the public help bridge this divide. The divide was attributable to the uniqueness of military culture and bonds, the personal changes associated with deployment, and the time it takes for veterans to reacclimate. Five themes captured what the public can do to foster veteran reintegration: <i>understand deployment hardships; appreciate deployment accomplishments; assist veterans in getting professional help; listen, don't judge; and recognize that employment is critical</i> to reintegration. Themes were present across groupings by gender, type of military service and screening status for posttraumatic stress disorder. Findings can inform interventions that target the public's understanding of and response to returning veteran. Consistent with an ecological model of reintegration, such interventions have the potential to foster successful reintegration. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":409666,"journal":{"name":"The American journal of orthopsychiatry","volume":" ","pages":"398-406"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"What the public should know about veterans returning from combat deployment to support reintegration: A qualitative analysis.\",\"authors\":\"Nina A Sayer, Robert J Orazem, Lauren L Mitchell, Kathleen F Carlson, Paula P Schnurr, Brett T Litz\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/ort0000541\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Consensus reports have called for interventions to educate civilians about the reintegration challenges that veterans experience. The current study describes veterans' perspectives of what the public should know and what the public can do to help veterans reintegrate into civilian life. We conducted thematic analysis of written essays from a stratified random sample of 100 US veterans (half women, half deployed from National Guard or Reserves) from Afghanistan and Iraq military operations who had participated in the control writing condition from a randomized controlled trial of expressive writing to improve reintegration outcomes. Veterans described a military-civilian divide that makes reintegration difficult and recommended that the public help bridge this divide. The divide was attributable to the uniqueness of military culture and bonds, the personal changes associated with deployment, and the time it takes for veterans to reacclimate. Five themes captured what the public can do to foster veteran reintegration: <i>understand deployment hardships; appreciate deployment accomplishments; assist veterans in getting professional help; listen, don't judge; and recognize that employment is critical</i> to reintegration. Themes were present across groupings by gender, type of military service and screening status for posttraumatic stress disorder. Findings can inform interventions that target the public's understanding of and response to returning veteran. Consistent with an ecological model of reintegration, such interventions have the potential to foster successful reintegration. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
共识报告呼吁采取干预措施,教育平民了解退伍军人面临的重新融入社会的挑战。目前的研究描述了退伍军人对公众应该知道什么以及公众可以做些什么来帮助退伍军人重新融入平民生活的看法。我们对来自阿富汗和伊拉克军事行动的100名美国退伍军人(一半是女性,一半来自国民警卫队或预备役)的书面文章进行了主题分析,这些退伍军人参加了表达性写作的随机对照试验的对照写作条件,以改善重返社会的结果。退伍军人描述了军民之间的分歧,这种分歧使重返社会变得困难,并建议公众帮助弥合这种分歧。这种差异是由于军队文化和纽带的独特性、与部署相关的个人变化以及退伍军人重新适应所需的时间。五个主题反映了公众可以做些什么来促进退伍军人重返社会:了解部署困难;欣赏部署成果;协助退伍军人获得专业帮助;倾听,不要评判;认识到就业对重新融入社会至关重要。主题是根据性别、兵役类型和创伤后应激障碍筛查状况进行分组的。调查结果可以为针对公众对退伍军人的理解和反应的干预措施提供信息。这种干预措施符合重新融入社会的生态模式,有可能促进成功的重新融入社会。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA,版权所有)。
What the public should know about veterans returning from combat deployment to support reintegration: A qualitative analysis.
Consensus reports have called for interventions to educate civilians about the reintegration challenges that veterans experience. The current study describes veterans' perspectives of what the public should know and what the public can do to help veterans reintegrate into civilian life. We conducted thematic analysis of written essays from a stratified random sample of 100 US veterans (half women, half deployed from National Guard or Reserves) from Afghanistan and Iraq military operations who had participated in the control writing condition from a randomized controlled trial of expressive writing to improve reintegration outcomes. Veterans described a military-civilian divide that makes reintegration difficult and recommended that the public help bridge this divide. The divide was attributable to the uniqueness of military culture and bonds, the personal changes associated with deployment, and the time it takes for veterans to reacclimate. Five themes captured what the public can do to foster veteran reintegration: understand deployment hardships; appreciate deployment accomplishments; assist veterans in getting professional help; listen, don't judge; and recognize that employment is critical to reintegration. Themes were present across groupings by gender, type of military service and screening status for posttraumatic stress disorder. Findings can inform interventions that target the public's understanding of and response to returning veteran. Consistent with an ecological model of reintegration, such interventions have the potential to foster successful reintegration. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).