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1.
PLoS One ; 18(2): e0281497, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36763680

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Around one-third of Americans reported they were unwilling to get a COVID-19 vaccine in April 2021. This focus group study aimed to provide insights on the factors contributing to unvaccinated adults' hesitancy or refusal to get vaccinated with COVID-19 vaccines. METHOD: Ipsos recruited 59 unvaccinated US adults who were vaccine hesitant (i.e., conflicted about or opposed to receiving a COVID-19 vaccination) using the Ipsos KnowledgePanel. Trained facilitators led a total of 10 focus groups via video-conference in March and April 2021. Two coders manually coded the data from each group using a coding frame based on the focus group discussion guide. The coding team collaborated in analyzing the data for key themes. RESULTS: Data analysis of transcripts from the focus groups illuminated four main themes associated with COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy: lack of trust in experts and institutions; concern about the safety of COVID-19 vaccines; resistance towards prescriptive guidance and restrictions; and, despite personal reluctance or unwillingness to get vaccinated, acceptance of others getting vaccinated. DISCUSSION: Vaccine confidence communication strategies should address individual concerns, describe the benefits of COVID-19 vaccination, and highlight evolving science using factural and neutral presentations of information to foster trust.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 Vaccines , COVID-19 , Adult , Humans , COVID-19/prevention & control , Qualitative Research , Focus Groups , Vaccination
2.
Fed Pract ; 38(1): 35-39, 2021 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33574647

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: There are ongoing discussions about reorganizing the delivery of health care within the US Armed Forces. The military cultural context of care has beneficial qualities for patients with orthopedic and extremity trauma acquired during deployments to conflict zones. METHODS: The study included 35 participants with lower limb amputations who had been discharged from the Amputee Patient Care Program ≥ 12 months prior to the study. Participants were interviewed using a lightly structured schedule designed to elicit accounts of community integration, which attended to reports of belongingness supported by accounts of social engagement in work, school, family, and social events. Interviews were analyzed using a modified content analysis approach. RESULTS: Participants generally described their postcare lives as "successful" that had been built on "good outcomes." For most former patients, remembering the social intensity of their rehabilitation program was an important element in their narratives of recovery. Weekly amputee clinics worked to alleviate stress and anxiety in participants' minds around the complexities of their injuries and care. CONCLUSIONS: Participants reported that features of their care were particularly valuable to their recovery and their current assessment of their injury related health. These features are present, in part because of the military cultural context that is part of the framework of care delivery.

3.
Mil Med ; 181(S4): 20-25, 2016 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27849457

ABSTRACT

The Center for Rehabilitation Sciences Research (CRSR) was established to advance the rehabilitative care for service members with combat-related injuries, particularly those with orthopedic, cognitive, and neurological complications. The center supports comprehensive research projects to optimize treatment strategies and promote the successful return to duty and community reintegration of injured service members. The center also provides a unique platform for fostering innovative research and incorporating clinical/technical advances in the rehabilitative care for service members. CRSR is composed of four research focus areas: (1) identifying barriers to successful rehabilitation and reintegration, (2) improving pain management strategies to promote full participation in rehabilitation programs, (3) applying novel technologies to advance rehabilitation methods and enhance outcome assessments, and (4) transferring new technology to improve functional capacity, independence, and quality of life. Each of these research focus areas works synergistically to influence the quality of life for injured service members. The purpose of this overview is to highlight the clinical research efforts of CRSR, namely how this organization engages a broad group of interdisciplinary investigators from medicine, biology, engineering, anthropology, and physiology to help solve clinically relevant problems for our service members, veterans, and their families.


Subject(s)
Research Support as Topic/organization & administration , Research Support as Topic/trends , Veterans/statistics & numerical data , Brain Injuries, Traumatic/rehabilitation , Humans , Orthopedics/trends , Pain Management/trends , Quality of Life/legislation & jurisprudence , Return to Work/legislation & jurisprudence , Return to Work/statistics & numerical data , Technology Transfer
4.
Disabil Rehabil ; 37(16): 1501-7, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25270306

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Despite growing knowledge about medical and functional recovery in clinical settings, the long-term issue of community reintegration with a spinal cord injury (SCI) in the military context remains virtually unexamined. Thus, the U.S. Department of Defense created the SCI Qualitative Research Program to advance knowledge about service members' reintegration into civilian life. The purpose of this paper is to better characterize the long-term outcomes related to the community participation experienced and desired vis-à-vis a case study of a military veteran who suffered a service-related traumatic SCI. METHODS: An in-depth anthropological interview was used with Jake, a 28-year old marine with a service-related C5/C6 SCI. Data were analyzed using content analysis. FINDINGS: Three significant themes were identified: opportunities for better engaging socially meaningful others may not be adequately included in so-called "client-centered" interventions; how management of the social self in inter-personal interactions and public spaces is critical to gaining broader societal acceptance; and how meaningful age normative relationships and activities are essential to establish lasting inclusive social connections. CONCLUSIONS: Jake's case challenges existing models of rehabilitation predominantly focused on physical capacity building. Study findings point to the need for rehabilitation to invest more resources in efforts to address the existential and social elements of long-term social reintegration. Implications for Rehabilitation Both the veteran with SCI and their meaningful support network face challenges socially reintegrating after injury and rehabilitation. Empowering clients to envision future possibilities in terms of family, intimate relationships, and meaningful work are important to successful long-term social reintegration. Addressing the existential desires and social capacities of the individual may be as important as addressing physical functioning skills after SCI.


Subject(s)
Community Integration , Military Personnel/psychology , Social Support , Spinal Cord Injuries/rehabilitation , Adult , Afghan Campaign 2001- , History, 21st Century , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Interviews as Topic , Iraq War, 2003-2011 , Male , Quality of Life , United States
5.
Med Anthropol Q ; 26(1): 1-3, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22574388

ABSTRACT

The three articles presented in this special section of Medical Anthropology Quarterly are devoted to the ways that military servicemembers' bodies are figured, deployed, symbolized, and represented. These articles illustrate two issues that confront the members of many contemporary militaries exemplified here by examples from the United States and Turkey (Ben Ari 2001; Bickford 2011; Pengelly and Irwin 2010; Weiss 1998). The first is that they are embedded in a set of ethical relations with the state that deploys them to conflicts. Military service confers a level of prestige and status, but it also entangles those who serve in complex social dilemmas. They are refigured as celebrated heroes in their communities but may also, as illustrated in Aciksoz's and Wool and Messinger's articles (this issue), find themselves dependent on their families and loved ones, as well as on military and state institutions. Servicemembers are also placed in new and complex relationships with their own bodies, and they come to experience vulnerability, mortality, and morality in novel and distinct ways.


Subject(s)
Anthropology, Medical , Military Personnel/psychology , Veterans/psychology , Humans , Turkey , United States , Veterans Health , Wounds and Injuries/psychology , Wounds and Injuries/rehabilitation
6.
Med Anthropol Q ; 26(1): 26-48, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22574390

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we explore the Non-Medical Attendant program at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, DC, which subsidizes the presence of war-injured soldiers' family members as they live for months or even years at Walter Reed during treatment and rehabilitation. We elaborate the ambiguities of the program and draw on ethnographic research to demonstrate how the program's vagaries combine with the context of an overburdened military medical system and the more familiar strains of family caregiving to place family members in a gray zone of care where the line between labors of love and institutionally compensated work is blurred.


Subject(s)
Caregivers , Family/psychology , Hospitals, Military , Military Personnel , Rehabilitation/methods , Rehabilitation/psychology , Wounds and Injuries/rehabilitation , District of Columbia , Female , Humans , Male , United States , Warfare
7.
Transcult Psychiatry ; 48(3): 284-98, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21742953

ABSTRACT

This article discusses the social organization of psychiatric work in the psychiatric emergency department of a public general hospital located in New York City, based on ethnographic research conducted from 1999 to 2001. Case studies of the care of two patients with ambiguous symptoms are discussed. The analysis applies the ''differences approach'' developed by Mol and colleagues which focuses on the way different professions provide divergent explanations and ontologies for symptoms and illness. The cases illustrate the ways in which social structural constraints are compelling psychiatry to become a multidisciplinary specialty.


Subject(s)
Emergency Services, Psychiatric/organization & administration , Hospitals, Municipal/organization & administration , Interprofessional Relations , Adjustment Disorders/diagnosis , Adjustment Disorders/therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Cooperative Behavior , Female , Humans , Male , New York City , Schizophrenia/diagnosis , Schizophrenia/therapy , Substance-Related Disorders/diagnosis , Substance-Related Disorders/therapy
8.
Med Anthropol Q ; 24(3): 281-303, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20949837

ABSTRACT

I describe the refashioning of a sense of self and identity of a junior officer in the U.S. Army who was injured in Iraq. Ethnographic data for this article were collected between July 2006 and January 2008. The setting for this article is the U.S. Armed Forces Amputee Patient Care Program at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Two models of rehabilitation are contrasted in the rehabilitation program. The first focuses on the refashioning of identity through a sports model of rehabilitation emphasizing physical functioning. The second approaches rehabilitation by emphasizing individual interests and the concern of a person who has a future life to develop. I conclude by arguing that understanding the process of rehabilitation from traumatic injury would benefit from a perspective that melds multiple dimensions, taking into account both the physical body and the social world that patients have inhabited and will inhabit.


Subject(s)
Amputation, Traumatic/rehabilitation , Amputees/rehabilitation , Artificial Limbs , Hospitals, Military , Military Personnel , Social Adjustment , Amputation, Traumatic/psychology , Amputees/psychology , Artificial Limbs/psychology , Humans , Iraq War, 2003-2011 , Leg Injuries , Male , Military Medicine/methods , Military Personnel/psychology , Patient Care/methods , Patient Care/psychology , United States
9.
Med Anthropol ; 29(2): 150-69, 2010 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20455142

ABSTRACT

In this article I explore the different orientations to time experienced by clinicians and patients in the US Armed Forces Amputee Patient Care Program at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington DC. In structuring, describing, and working with patients, clinicians rely on a rehabilitative program that is embedded in a narrative notion of time. This approach seeks to embed the grievous wounds patients have sustained along a trajectory of injured to well. Patients are often eager to adopt this approach to their injury but in many cases find that the linear flow of time, upon which this clinical approach relies, is not matched by their experience. Instead the past, the present, and the future can flow together so that patients are simultaneously experiencing these three time orientations. This can create the potential for misunderstanding and conflict between clinicians over adherence and the meaning of a good rehabilitative outcome.


Subject(s)
Amputees/psychology , Amputees/rehabilitation , Military Personnel , Perception , Physical Therapy Modalities/psychology , Humans , Military Medicine/methods , Patient Care/methods , Sociology, Medical , Time , United States
10.
Disabil Rehabil ; 31(25): 2130-4, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19888835

ABSTRACT

In this article, I look at the role that context of injury plays in the rehabilitation of military patients who sustained a limb amputation as a result of blast injury trauma in Afghanistan and Iraq. This article contrasts the technologically driven model of rehabilitation produced by the US Armed Forces Amputee Patient Care Program at Walter Reed Army Medical Center with a person centered approach building on work in medical anthropology. In this article, two case studies are contrasted illustrating the reasons behind the rejection of an upper extremity prosthetic device in one example and the acceptance of one in another. I argue that even in light of the incredible advances in medical technique and prosthetic technology, a body and functionality focussed rehabilitation must also pay attention to the subjective experiences of individual patients in terms of their present and their past.


Subject(s)
Amputation, Surgical/rehabilitation , Artificial Limbs , Blast Injuries/rehabilitation , Military Personnel , Afghan Campaign 2001- , Amputation, Surgical/psychology , Amputees , Arm , Arm Injuries/rehabilitation , Arm Injuries/surgery , Blast Injuries/surgery , District of Columbia , Hospitals, Military , Humans , Iraq War, 2003-2011 , Leg , Leg Injuries/rehabilitation , Leg Injuries/surgery , Military Personnel/psychology , Multiple Trauma/rehabilitation
11.
Qual Health Res ; 17(3): 353-63, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17301343

ABSTRACT

Representations are the socially and textually produced patients as presented in clinical discussion and the clinical chart. An understudied aspect of representations in medicine is the way in which they are used to highlight contests of expertise and authority between clinicians, which have consequences over control of critical hospital resources. The author uses ethnographic research in a public urban hospital psychiatry department in New York City to examine the rounds meetings of a psychiatric emergency room, exploring the way in which representatives of a variety of occupational groups portray patients as they present and debate alternative diagnoses. He uses narratives of rounds meetings to illustrate the interactions, debates, and work of psychiatric and nonpsychiatric clinicians as they struggle to diagnose and develop treatment plans for patients. The enhanced authority of nonpsychiatrist clinicians that emerges from successful contests of representations illustrates a possible future for psychiatry as a multidisciplinary medical specialty.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence , Emergency Services, Psychiatric/organization & administration , Interprofessional Relations , Patients , Anthropology, Cultural , Hospitals, Public , Hospitals, Urban , Humans , New York City
12.
Cult Med Psychiatry ; 30(3): 363-87, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16969705

ABSTRACT

This article is a qualitative study of the social organization of clinical work in a psychiatric emergency room. The research involved observation of emergency room practices and interviews with the clinical staff members. Due to responsibility of ensuring confidentiality, audio taping was not possible. Observations and interviews were recorded by hand, and thus, except in brief instances, I describe talk rather than reproduce it verbatim. Psychiatry, I argue, should not be explored as a singular profession but as the team practice of a team of occupational groups. These groups are often seen as subordinate to psychiatric physicians, but as this paper will demonstrate these groups are often able to call upon their specific claims to expert knowledge to assume clinical authority over a patient's diagnosis and treatment. The successful pursuit of such a claim puts these clinical occupational groups in a position to challenge psychiatrists over crucial hospital resources such as beds. These groups' claim to authority emerges from two sources. The first is their specific histories and their clinical knowledge systems that initially developed independently of cosmopolitan medicine. The second is the political economic environment of urban hospital psychiatric departments which largely treat patients with opaque symptoms of unclear origin that defy easy psychiatric classification.


Subject(s)
Emergency Services, Psychiatric , Health Personnel , Mental Disorders/psychology , Organizational Culture , Patient Care Team , Psychiatry , Adult , Hospitalization , Hospitals, Urban , Humans , Male , Mental Disorders/diagnosis , Mental Disorders/rehabilitation , Psychiatric Department, Hospital , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Substance-Related Disorders/diagnosis , Substance-Related Disorders/psychology , Substance-Related Disorders/rehabilitation , Workforce
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