ABSTRACT
PURPOSE: We review the role of military mental health professionals in consulting with inpatient medical patients and staff at a combat hospital and aeromedical evacuation staging facility in Iraq. CONCLUSIONS: Behavioral health consultation with medical and surgical patients during hospitalization and prior to aeromedical evacuation can help identify patients with combat stress exposure that may require future mental health follow-up. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Extensive use of civilian mental health practitioners including nurse psychotherapists and psychiatric nurse practitioners will be needed to provide psychiatric care for the large number of U.S. veterans who return from deployment with combat stress related disorders.
Subject(s)
Combat Disorders , Military Nursing/organization & administration , Military Personnel , Patient Care Team/organization & administration , Psychiatric Nursing/organization & administration , Adult , Combat Disorders/diagnosis , Combat Disorders/psychology , Combat Disorders/therapy , Female , Hospitals, Military , Humans , Iraq War, 2003-2011 , Male , Mass Screening , Military Nursing/education , Military Personnel/psychology , Military Psychiatry/organization & administration , Models, Organizational , Nurse's Role , Nursing Assessment , Psychiatric Nursing/education , Psychology, Clinical/organization & administration , Referral and Consultation/organization & administration , Social Work, Psychiatric/organization & administration , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/diagnosis , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/psychology , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/therapy , Transportation of Patients , Triage , United StatesABSTRACT
TOPIC: Exposure to combat-related trauma is a leading cause of posttraumatic stress disorder. Deployed military mental health practitioners serve important roles in the assessment, diagnosis, and aeromedical evacuation of psychiatric patients from the combat zone. PURPOSE: To review the role of military mental health professionals working with psychiatric patients at a combat hospital and aeromedical staging facility in Iraq. SOURCE OF INFORMATION: Military operating instructions, existing theoretical and research literature, and personal experiences of the authors while deployed to Iraq. CONCLUSIONS: Psychiatric screening can help reduce risk in potentially unstable mental health patients prior to aeromedical evacuation. Civilian nurse psychotherapists and advanced practice psychiatric nurses will be needed to provide psychiatric follow-up care for the large number of military veterans returning from combat.