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1.
Curr Psychiatry Rep ; 23(10): 67, 2021 09 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34586518

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The field of women's mental health has grown in the military healthcare system, which has begun to acknowledge and address the sex-specific differences in mental health for service women. The purpose of this review is to examine recent research in active duty populations addressing perinatal mental health, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and gender isolation. RECENT FINDINGS: Within the examined literature focused on active duty populations, analyses by sex and gender continue to exist as notable gaps, and a majority of studies reviewed either do not aim to examine sex or gender-based differences, and/or do not analyze data with an eye towards these paradigms. Within perinatal mental health, the lack of studies led to an inability to make any notable conclusions. PTSD was the area with the most robust publications focused on active duty women, studies of major depression showed significant occupational impact, and the area of gender isolation continues to grow as a promising field with practical implications. We discuss current promising research and advance ideas for future research trajectories that will provide clinicians, policy makers, and scientists with more data to support improved mental healthcare for both military women and men.


Subject(s)
Military Personnel , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Health , Pregnancy , Sex Factors , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/epidemiology , Women's Health
2.
Acad Psychiatry ; 39(4): 393-7, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26063679

ABSTRACT

Suicide is an event that is almost universally encountered by psychiatrists and psychiatry residents. Because psychiatric patients are at a higher risk for completing suicide than patients of other specialties, psychiatry residents are at risk for experiencing the suicide of a patient during their training. A review of the literature shows that there is continually growing research into the negative emotional effects of patient suicides on psychiatry residents and the need for clear response protocols when a suicide occurs, also known as postvention protocols. However, there are no Graduate Medical Education requirements to specifically train psychiatry residents about this, even with a well-voiced desire by residents to receive this training. In the National Capitol Consortium Psychiatry Residency, encounters with patient suicides by residents in a time of war led us to a place in which interventions were designed and instituted to care for the caregiver, in this case focusing on psychiatry trainees. Our process and product, described here, offers an example of a systematic postvention response. It addresses aspects of what is known in the research base, combined with acknowledgement of the human response and the institutional need for a consistent and objective response.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical, Graduate/methods , Guidelines as Topic , Military Psychiatry/education , Physicians/psychology , Social Support , Suicide , Education, Medical, Graduate/organization & administration , Humans , Information Dissemination/methods , Psychiatry/education
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