During recent conflicts in which the United States military is engaged, research exposed the high number of conflict veterans suffering from behavioral health problems. Existing research primarily focuses on the individual psychological processes of those suffering from mental disorders and the perceived barriers to care, the most salient of which is fear of stigmatization (Hoge et al. 2004, Ouimette et al. 2011). In order to explore mental illness stigma from the unique perspective of U.S. military service members, data were collected during semi-structured interviews with ten active duty U.S. Army officers and nine East Carolina University Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) cadets. Personal semantic analysis and narrative analysis re...
Military stigma is a heavy burden of social stigma internalized by veterans who are diagnosed with p...
Former United States military members have consistently faced mental health concerns post discharge ...
Approximately 60% of military personnel who experience mental health problems do not seek help, yet ...
During recent conflicts in which the United States military is engaged, research exposed the high nu...
During recent conflicts in which the United States military is engaged, research exposed the high nu...
Current research suggests up to 43% of United States and 37% of United Kingdom troops returning home...
Mental health stigma among military service members has been recognized as a significant barrier to ...
The purpose of this phenomenological study was to examine the experiences of active-duty servicememb...
Mental health stigma and barriers to care (BTC) reportedly impede help seeking among U.K. military p...
This article reports two studies that used the Ganz Scale of Identification with Military Culture (G...
Prior researchers have identified stigma as a significant barrier to mental health treatment for mil...
The purpose of this research project is to measure whether U.S. military veterans experience any sti...
Predominant military ideology, which perpetuates hegemonic masculinity by purporting emotional and p...
PERCEIVED STIGMAS AND BARRIERS FOR VETERANS WITH MENTAL HEALTH DISORDERS Elaine Lobo Faculty Sponsor...
Military service members are more likely to endure a significant amount of stress and experience mul...
Military stigma is a heavy burden of social stigma internalized by veterans who are diagnosed with p...
Former United States military members have consistently faced mental health concerns post discharge ...
Approximately 60% of military personnel who experience mental health problems do not seek help, yet ...
During recent conflicts in which the United States military is engaged, research exposed the high nu...
During recent conflicts in which the United States military is engaged, research exposed the high nu...
Current research suggests up to 43% of United States and 37% of United Kingdom troops returning home...
Mental health stigma among military service members has been recognized as a significant barrier to ...
The purpose of this phenomenological study was to examine the experiences of active-duty servicememb...
Mental health stigma and barriers to care (BTC) reportedly impede help seeking among U.K. military p...
This article reports two studies that used the Ganz Scale of Identification with Military Culture (G...
Prior researchers have identified stigma as a significant barrier to mental health treatment for mil...
The purpose of this research project is to measure whether U.S. military veterans experience any sti...
Predominant military ideology, which perpetuates hegemonic masculinity by purporting emotional and p...
PERCEIVED STIGMAS AND BARRIERS FOR VETERANS WITH MENTAL HEALTH DISORDERS Elaine Lobo Faculty Sponsor...
Military service members are more likely to endure a significant amount of stress and experience mul...
Military stigma is a heavy burden of social stigma internalized by veterans who are diagnosed with p...
Former United States military members have consistently faced mental health concerns post discharge ...
Approximately 60% of military personnel who experience mental health problems do not seek help, yet ...