Recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have re-ignited debates on how to prevent and manage psychological injury among returning troops. These debates point to the psychological cost of war as a grand challenge whose scale and complexity stretch far beyond the already large and growing number of veterans affected. We use a unique ethnography of a military medical team's tour of duty in Camp Bastion, Afghanistan, to explore the role of institutional context as a contributing factor to psychological injury from war. We find that exposure to war and its consequences invokes sustained experiences of senselessness, futility, and surreality that are partially rooted in cultural expectations, professional role identity, and organizational protocol, a...
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was formally recognised as a psychiatric disorder in 1980, lar...
There has been a long-term suspicion in religious and psychological literatures that unethical wars ...
The story we share here stems from our research with British military personnel who are adapting to ...
The present study offers valuable insights into the psychological impact of war on wounded ex-combat...
Based on longitudinal ethnographic fieldwork in Bosnia and Herzegovina I trace ontologies of posttra...
Contains fulltext : 162970pub.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Research i...
Beginning from theories of psychological trauma as ‘moral injury’, this dissertation argues against ...
This investigation explores the consequences of traumatic events within the context of the readjustm...
Military mental health clinicians (MMHCs) have been essential to Operations Enduring Freedom and Ira...
The U.S.-led wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have resulted in thousands of servicemembers and veterans ...
Researchers have tried to determine and verify the effects of violent conflicts on the mental health...
Background. Between 2001 and 2014, British military nurses served in Afghanistan caring for both Ser...
From Elsevier via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: accepted 2016-05-11, issue date 2016-10-31, epub ...
This paper seeks to bridge the divisive split between advocates of trauma-focused and psychosocial a...
While much research has been conducted on military trauma, conceptualizations of deployment‐related ...
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was formally recognised as a psychiatric disorder in 1980, lar...
There has been a long-term suspicion in religious and psychological literatures that unethical wars ...
The story we share here stems from our research with British military personnel who are adapting to ...
The present study offers valuable insights into the psychological impact of war on wounded ex-combat...
Based on longitudinal ethnographic fieldwork in Bosnia and Herzegovina I trace ontologies of posttra...
Contains fulltext : 162970pub.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Research i...
Beginning from theories of psychological trauma as ‘moral injury’, this dissertation argues against ...
This investigation explores the consequences of traumatic events within the context of the readjustm...
Military mental health clinicians (MMHCs) have been essential to Operations Enduring Freedom and Ira...
The U.S.-led wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have resulted in thousands of servicemembers and veterans ...
Researchers have tried to determine and verify the effects of violent conflicts on the mental health...
Background. Between 2001 and 2014, British military nurses served in Afghanistan caring for both Ser...
From Elsevier via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: accepted 2016-05-11, issue date 2016-10-31, epub ...
This paper seeks to bridge the divisive split between advocates of trauma-focused and psychosocial a...
While much research has been conducted on military trauma, conceptualizations of deployment‐related ...
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was formally recognised as a psychiatric disorder in 1980, lar...
There has been a long-term suspicion in religious and psychological literatures that unethical wars ...
The story we share here stems from our research with British military personnel who are adapting to ...