1. MIlitary Combat Mental Health Framework
- Author
-
Martin Bricknell
- Subjects
Military service ,media_common.quotation_subject ,occupational & industrial medicine ,Applied psychology ,Psychological intervention ,Vulnerability ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Military Medicine ,Research evidence ,media_common ,Personal View ,General Medicine ,Mental illness ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,United Kingdom ,psychiatry ,030227 psychiatry ,Life course approach ,Preventive Medicine ,Psychological resilience ,Psychology ,Delivery of Health Care ,mental health - Abstract
This paper describes a framework for understanding military combat mental health based on the possible mental ill-health consequences of exposure to ‘potential trauma events’ for members of the armed forces and after their military service as veterans. It uses a life course approach that maps an individual’s mental well-being against four ‘states’: fit, reacting, injured and ill. It then considers five categories of factors that influence the risk of mental illness from this exposure based on research evidence; prejoining vulnerability, resilience, precipitating, treatment and recovery. This framework offers a structure to debate current knowledge, inform policy and therapeutic interventions, provide education and to guide future research into the subject.
- Published
- 2020