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Home from the War: Where can I get the help I need?. Beth Wick, Manager of 2-1-1 Texas I&R Network Mary Cooksey, Director of 2-1-1 West Central Texas. Goal. To provide scope of the problem for the individual, families, and societal impacts of OIF/OEF.
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Home from the War: Where can I get the help I need? Beth Wick, Manager of 2-1-1 Texas I&R Network Mary Cooksey, Director of 2-1-1 West Central Texas
Goal • To provide scope of the problem for the individual, families, and societal impacts of OIF/OEF. • To provide information on how one I&R decided to be part of the solution.
OIF/OEF Operation Iraq Freedom Operation Enduring Freedom
“No one comes home from war unchanged.” Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans
Scope of Issue • ~1.5 Million Soldiers have served • 449,000 deployed > 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
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
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
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%
Military Families cont… • Dual military families (6.9%) • Single active duty parents (5.4%) • Families with special health care needs (7.3%)
Military Families con’t… • 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 child’s mental health (Flake et al., 2008)
Military Families con’t • 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
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
Military Youth con’t… • 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
Military Youth con’t… • 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).
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
Scope of Problem • MH symptoms reported to a health care provider • 56% of Active Duty • 60% of Reservists • 76% of Veterans • Dole-Shalala Commission
Scope of Problem • 300,000 OIF/OEF Veterans with PTSD and/or Major Depression • 320,000 OIF/OEF Veterans with TBI • RAND Survey: 2008
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
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
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
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
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 @ BIAT, August, 2005 Deputy Director, Defense of Veterans Brain Injury Center
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
Psychological/Psychiatric and Psychosocial Changes after TBI Personality: Increased/Decreased Activation Episodic Dyscontrol; Irritability Psychiatric: Mood Disturbance Psychosis Psychosocial: Work Status Relationships with others
Alcohol Abuse Narcotic addiction Major Depression Military Sexual Trauma Job loss Family dissolution Homelessness Violence towards others Incarceration Suicide Post Deployment Mental Health: It’s not just PTSD and/or TBI
Effects on Relationships 1. Social anxiety 2. Angry outbursts 3. Emotional unavailability 4. Sleep disturbance 5. Difficulty managing family roles and responsibilities
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
Impact on Families • Domestic Violence • Childhood Abuse • Substance Abuse • Parent with MH/TBI and associated socioeconomic/legal issues
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