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THIRD TRIMESTER BLEEDING

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Survey of 894 Army soldiers from Operation Iraqi Freedom: ... Single active duty parents (5.4%) Families with special health care needs (7.3%) Military Families con ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THIRD TRIMESTER BLEEDING


1
Home from the War Where can I get the help I
need?

Beth Wick, Manager of 2-1-1 Texas IR
Network Mary Cooksey, Director of 2-1-1 West
Central Texas
2
Goal
  • To provide scope of the problem for the
    individual, families, and societal impacts of
    OIF/OEF.
  • To provide information on how one IR decided to
    be part of the solution.

3
OIF/OEF
  • Operation Iraq Freedom
  • Operation Enduring Freedom

4
No one comes home from war unchanged.
  • Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans

5
Scope of Issue
  • 1.5 Million Soldiers have served
  • 449,000 deployed gt 1 tour
  • 20 Female Soldiers
  • As of January 23, 2006, DoD reports 505,366
    OIF/OEF Veterans eligible for VA services
  • 43 separated Active Duty troops
  • 57 Reserve/National Guard members

6
What We Know About OIF/ OEF Veterans
  • 19 OIF, and 11 OEF have mental health problems
  • 17 of OIF Soldiers and Marines screened
    positive for PTSD, generalized anxiety, or
    depression
  • 35 OIF veterans accessed MH services in first
    year
  • Hoge, Journal of American Medical Association,
    2006

7
What we know
  • Survey of 894 Army soldiers from Operation Iraqi
    Freedom
  • 95 observed dead bodies or human remains
    93 were shot at or received small-arms fire
    89 were attacked or ambushed 65 observed
    injured or dead Americans 48 were responsible
    for the death of an enemy combatant
  • Charles Hoge et al., 2004

8
What we know about the families
  • Over half of service members are married
  • At least 1.8 million children have one or both
    parents in the military
  • 1.2 million with Active Duty parents and 650,000
    with parents in reserves
  • Ages of children affected by deployment
  • 0-5 40
  • 6-11 33
  • 12-18 25

9
Military Families cont
  • Dual military families (6.9)
  • Single active duty parents (5.4)
  • Families with special health care needs (7.3)

10
Military Families cont
  • Over ½ said their child had trouble sleeping
  • 1/3 of the children were categorized as high
    risk for psychosocial problems (which is 2.5x
    the national norm)
  • Parenting stress levels were double that of
    normative data
  • Parental stress was most significant predictor of
    childs mental health
  • (Flake et al., 2008)

11
Military Families cont
  • Nationally, rate of child maltreatment in
    families of enlisted soldiers was 42 percent
    higher when military spouses were off at war than
    when they were at home
  • Female civilian parents were twice as likely to
    abuse a child physically and almost four times
    more likely to neglect a child when male soldiers
    were deployed than at other times.
  • Gibbs (2007) Studied U.S. Army families
    worldwide 2001 - 2004 using Army human-resource
    data and Army Central Registry

12
Military Youth Unique Challenges
  • Frequent moves
  • Changing schools, friends, activities, etc.
  • Parent working long hours and away for long
    periods of time
  • Unprecedented combat deployments
  • Many parents returning home with physical and/or
    emotional wounds

13
Military Youth cont
  • 53 worry about my military parent while he/she
    is deployed
  • 38 worry about the person who takes care of me
    while my parent is deployed
  • 57 of interviewed youth said that getting to
    know their parent again (upon homecoming) was
    difficult.
  • Chandra et al 2008

14
Military Youth cont
  • ACADEMIC PROBLEMS Parental deployments may be
    related to modest decreases in test scores across
    most subjects effects may be long-term (Engel
    et al., 2006)
  • PHYSIOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES Teens whose parents
    had been deployed to Iraq had significantly
    higher levels of systolic blood pressure, heart
    rate, and perceived stress than a civilian
    comparison group (Barnes et al., 2007).

15
Scope of Problem
  • 30-40 Iraq Veterans will face depression,
    anxiety, or PTSD
  • Multiple tours and prolonged deployments increase
    combat stress by 50
  • National Guard and Reserve at increased risk for
    MH issues and Suicide

16
Scope of Problem
  • MH symptoms reported to a health care provider
  • 56 of Active Duty
  • 60 of Reservists
  • 76 of Veterans
  • Dole-Shalala Commission

17
Scope of Problem
  • 300,000 OIF/OEF Veterans with PTSD and/or Major
    Depression
  • 320,000 OIF/OEF Veterans with TBI
  • RAND Survey 2008

18
Scope of Problem
  • NOT Knowledgeable about MH warning signs
  • 49 Soldiers
  • 52 Military Spouses
  • Treatment options for MH Ignorance
  • 59 Soldiers
  • 66 Military Spouses
  • 10 have sought treatment STIGMA prevents MH
    Care
  • APA Harris Interactive Survey 2008

19
PTSD
20
Diagnosis of PTSD
  • The individual experienced or witnessed an event
    that involved actual or threatened death or
    serious injury, and felt very afraid or
    helpless.
  • Traumatic events can include a wide variety of
    different experiences
  • military troops involved in combat
  • victims and rescue workers involved in natural
    disasters
  • victims and rescue workers involved in man-made
    disasters
  • sexual assault or other violent crimes
  • domestic violence
  • physical and/or sexual abuse
  • immigrants fleeing violence in their homeland
  • Torture
  • MVAs

21
Impact of PTSD
  • Individuals may AVOID certain triggers or
    reminders of the trauma and may experience
    EMOTIONAL NUMBING (and/or distance themselves
    from others).
  • They may try to avoid
  • activities
  • places
  • thoughts
  • people

22
Traumatic Brain Injury
23
What Is A Traumatic Brain Injury?
  • External force applied to the head
  • Disruption of brain function
  • Alteration of consciousness
  • incomplete memory of the event
  • dazed or confused
  • loss of consciousness

Adapted from ACRM Special Task Force on TBI
24
Blast Injury
  • Incidence of TBI in med evac patients with blast
    injuries at Walter Reed 60
  • 64 of all military-related TBI from blast
  • OIF/OEF 33 of all battle injuries TBI
  • Past war-wounded 14-20 TBI
  • ? Modern warfare ? TBI risk 2X greater

Warren Lux, MD, Presentation _at_ BIAT, August,
2005 Deputy Director, Defense of Veterans Brain
Injury Center
25
Impact of TBI
  • Attention/Concentration
  • Speed of Mental Processing
  • Learning/Information Retrieval
  • Executive Functions (e. g., Planning, Problem
    Solving, Self Monitoring) May see judgment
    problems, apathy, inappropriate behaviors

26
Psychological/Psychiatric and Psychosocial
Changes after TBI
  • Personality
  • Increased/Decreased Activation
  • Episodic Dyscontrol Irritability
  • Psychiatric
  • Mood Disturbance
  • Psychosis
  • Psychosocial
  • Work Status
  • Relationships with others

27
Public Health Impact OIF/OEF
28
Post Deployment Mental Health Its not just PTSD
and/or TBI
  • Job loss
  • Family dissolution
  • Homelessness
  • Violence towards others
  • Incarceration
  • Suicide
  • Alcohol Abuse
  • Narcotic addiction
  • Major Depression
  • Military Sexual Trauma

29
Effects on Relationships
  • 1. Social anxiety
  • 2. Angry outbursts
  • 3. Emotional unavailability
  • 4. Sleep disturbance
  • 5. Difficulty managing family roles and
    responsibilities

30
Relationship Impact
  • 20 of married Iraq troops are planning a divorce
  • 2/3 of Married or Cohabitating Veterans report
    Family Adjustment Issues
  • Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America

31
Impact on Families
  • Domestic Violence
  • Childhood Abuse
  • Substance Abuse
  • Parent with MH/TBI and associated
    socioeconomic/legal issues

32
What To Do, and How To Do It
  • Community Awareness
  • Military Forces members, Veterans, and their
    families
  • Employers
  • School
  • Faith Based Organizations
  • State Non-Profit Agencies
  • Health Care Providers
  • Coordination of Available Services
  • 2-1-1 West Central Texas Experience
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