Guilford Publications Inc.
View my basket
Atypon Link logo

You have no access to this article

Association of a Training Psychotherapy, Experience with Deployment Stress in Military Physicians


Author(s): Aaron W. Haney | Sheila Hafter Gray
doi: 10.1521/jaap.2007.35.1.71
Prev | Table of contents | Next
 
View PDF article (118 K) View PDF with links (119 K)
Email this link
 What is RSS?
Trouble viewing articles as PDF?
 
  Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry
 
Print ISSN: 1546-0371
Volume: 35 | Issue: 1
Cover date: Spring 2007
Page(s): 71-75
 
 
  Abstract

This study examines whether an elective Training Psychotherapy Experience (TPE) confers any specific benefit for those who must engage in military operations. A questionnaire and an Impact of Event Scale—Revised (IES–R) were sent to military physicians who had graduated from the F. Edward Hébert School of Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS) after 1980 and completed residencies in psychiatry, internal medicine, or a combination of the two. Those who participated in TPE and those who did not were compared in respect of demographics and whether they chose to remain in or leave the military after obligation. There was no difference in retention between the two groups. We suggest that this may be due to their medical education having taken place in a military–oriented environment. The IES–R scores confirm earlier findings that deployed medical personnel have fewer psychiatric sequellae than deployed combat troops (Kolkow, Grieger, Morse, & Spira, 2005).

 
  Author(s) affiliations
 
1Psychiatry Resident, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC.
2Psychiatry Consultant, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC, Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD.
212th CSC, Bldg #4013, Indiana Avenue, Ft. Campbell, KY 42223, E-mail: aaron.haney@us.army.mil