2007
DOI: 10.7205/milmed.172.5.451
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Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Depression in Health Care Providers Returning from Deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan

Abstract: For health care workers returning from a warfare environment, threat of personal harm may be the most predictive factor in determining those with subsequent PTSD.

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Cited by 175 publications
(99 citation statements)
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“…Although professionals who treat seriously wounded and dying combatants encounter gruesome situations, 18 the potential risk for PTSD in this population is not as clear as it is in service members with greater risk for direct personal life threat. 19,20 Nevertheless, we assessed exposure to both military healthcare stressors and combat-related stressors.…”
Section: Does the Repressor Coping Stylementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although professionals who treat seriously wounded and dying combatants encounter gruesome situations, 18 the potential risk for PTSD in this population is not as clear as it is in service members with greater risk for direct personal life threat. 19,20 Nevertheless, we assessed exposure to both military healthcare stressors and combat-related stressors.…”
Section: Does the Repressor Coping Stylementioning
confidence: 99%
“…An earlier review (Tanielian and Jaycox, 2008) identified 11 studies that reported rates of depression among active-duty service members serving in OEF or OIF, ranging from 5 percent (Hoge, Auchterlonie and Milliken, 2006;Kolkow et al, 2007;MHAT-II, 2005) to 37 percent (Lapierre, Schwegler, and Labauve, 2007). Correlates of depression in the 11 studies included having a hospitalization during deployment or other physical problems; being female, under 25 years of age, nonwhite, or junior enlisted; and deployment intensity (i.e., level of combat, two or more deployments, deployment for more than six months) (Tanielian and Jaycox, 2008).…”
Section: Ptsd and Depression Among Service Membersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…16 Returning HCPs did not think that people understood what they had been through during deployment and felt unsupported. 17 Historically, nurses who served in theater in Vietnam identified that their memories of horrific experiences remained with them decades after their return home. [18][19][20] Posttraumatic stress symptoms in these nurses were attributable to multiple causes; however, the most significant were danger to self and others, exhaustion and fatigue, and care of the dying and critically wounded.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%