Deployment Psychology Blog
CDP News: 16 August 2019
Welcome to this week’s edition of CDP News! We like to use this space to review recent happenings in and around the Center for Deployment Psychology, while also looking ahead to upcoming events. It's the middle of August and fall is quickly approaching. Summer may be ending, but there's always more training opportunities!
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Research Update: 15 August 2019
The weekly Research Update contains the latest news, journal articles, useful links from around the web. Some of this week's topics include:
● PTSD Research Quarterly -- PTSD and TBI Comorbidity
● A randomized controlled trial of public messaging to promote safe firearm storage among U.S. military veterans.
● Military Telehealth: A Model For Delivering Expertise To The Point Of Need In Austere And Operational Environments.
● Competent Cultural Telebehavioral Healthcare to Rural Diverse Populations: Administration, Evaluation, and Financing
Staff Perspective: Can Good People Do Bad Things?
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) among Service members and Veterans receives a lot of well-deserved attention. That said, it was not until 1992, that the term Moral Injury was coined by Dr. Jonathan Shay to describe the devastating impacts of an event or experience that violates one’s personal ideals, ethics, moral expectations, conscience, or attachments. Since moral expectations are at the core of who we are as humans, moral injury describes a fracture to one’s deepest sense of being. The result of this moral violation can lead to guilt, existential crisis, and loss of trust (Jinkerson, 2016).
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