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Thousands of American service members are returning from their
tours of duty with physical and/or psychological disabilities.
Many--if not most--of these service members will need at least some
assistance to adapt to their disabilities and learn how to
reintegrate back into civilian life. Also impacted will be the
spouse, friends, employers, family members, counselors, and
community members of each veteran with a disability. The veterans
may not be aware of the ways in which their disabilities are
impacting them, nor knowledgeable about the resources available to
help them cope. In addition, many such individuals feel isolated
and reluctant to acknowledge their difficulties or ask for
assistance. This book will provide veterans with disabilities,
their families, friends, and supporters with the knowledge that
they are not alone. It will help them understand how the
disabilities are impacting them, and guide them to information and
resources that will help them accommodate the disabilities and
reintegrate back into civilian society. The volume compiles and
summarizes the information disabled veterans and those with whom
they interact will be interested in knowing and using. It describes
how disabilities can impact an individual physically,
psychologically, and spiritually. It also provides a context of
these disabilities to reassure the readers that they are not alone
in the thoughts, feelings, and pain, and that others have
experienced the same problems and found solutions. The work
provides guidance on different forms of treatment that may help the
veteran and includes a list of contact information for local VA
centers, peer-to-peer counseling services, and other programs,
services, and individuals available (frequently for free) for
veterans and their families. Brief biographies of disabled veterans
and case studies of the ways they reintegrated back into civilian
society provide support and perspective. In addition to aiding
veterans, the book will serve as a useful reference source for
librarians and other information providers.
The United States is in the midst of the largest military
demobilization in its history. This is leading to an increase in
the demand for mental health clinicians who can provide services to
hundreds of thousands of military veterans and members of the
military. Nearly two million Americans have been deployed to the
wars in the Middle East, and thousands of them have been deeply
affected, either psychologically, physically, or both. Projections
suggest that 300,000 are returning with symptoms of PTSD or major
Depression; 320,000 have been exposed to probable Traumatic Brain
Injuries; and hundreds of thousands are dealing with psychological
effects of physical injuries. Other veterans and members of the
military without injuries will seek treatment to help them with the
psychological impact of serving in the military, being deployed, or
transitioning and reintegrating back into the civilian world. As an
example, hundreds of thousands of service members are also leaving
the armed forces earlier than they anticipated and will need to
quickly adjust to life as civilians after assuming that they would
have many more years in the military. Many will be leaving the
military because of demobilizations and downsizing due to budget
cuts. Current proposed cuts will shrink the military force to the
same size it was in 1940. The Pew Center reports that 44% of
veterans from the current wars are describing their readjustment to
civilian life as "difficult," and many of them are and will be
turning to civilian mental health and primary care clinicians for
assistance. The Handbook of Psychosocial Interventions for Veterans
and Service Members is a "one stop" handbook for non-military
clinicians working with service members, veterans, and their
families. It brings together experts from the Department of
Defense, the Department of Veterans Affairs, veteran service
organizations, and academia to create the first comprehensive
guidebook for civilian clinicians. In addition to covering
psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety, and PTSD, this
book also offers information about psychosocial topics that impact
military personnel and their loved ones and can become part of
treatment (e.g., employment or education options, financial
matters, and parenting concerns), providing the most recent and
cutting-edge research on the topics. Chapters are concise and
practical, delivering the key information necessary to orient
clinicians to the special needs of veterans and their families. The
Handbook of Psychosocial Interventions for Veterans and Service
Members is an essential resource for private practice mental health
clinicians and primary care physicians, as well as a useful adjunct
for VA and DOD psychologists and staff.
This state-of-the-science guide to assessing and treating
posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in active-duty service members
and veterans has now been extensively revised with 65% new
material. Leading authorities review available evidence-based
treatments, including individual, group, and couple and family
therapy approaches. Knowledge about military culture, the stressors
experienced by service members, and common challenges for both
military and civilian practitioners is woven through the volume and
reflected in the vivid case examples. Chapters on specific clinical
issues delve into co-occurring affective, anxiety, substance use,
and sleep disorders; treatment of particular types of trauma;
suicide prevention; and more. New to This Edition *Chapters on
additional treatments: mindfulness-based behavioral and cognitive
therapies, stress inoculation training, cognitive-behavioral
conjoint therapy, group therapy, and complementary and alternative
therapies. *Chapters on additional clinical issues: chronic pain,
moral injury, complex traumatic stress disorders, and posttraumatic
growth. *Updated throughout with the latest treatment research and
DSM-5 diagnostic changes.
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