This volume provides several perspectives that help practitioners, advocates, and policymakers understand the impact of historical and recent wars on U.S. Military veterans. The chapters address newly recognized conditions, such as moral injury, military sexual trauma, and remote combat trauma as precursors to more serious diagnosable mental health disorders with the goal of addressing how these conditions can be identified and mitigated in future combat operations. The chaptersalso provide new insights on calculating the costs of wars in terms of dollars spent on treating mental health conditions, the intergenerational impact of combat trauma on families and future generations, and involvement in the criminal justice system of those who do not receive treatment due todischarge characterizations from military misconduct.
Forward; Preface; Dedication; List of Contributors and Biographies; Introduction: Recognizing the Transforming Landscape of War Injuries and Treatments; Evan R. Seamone; PART I: THE UNCOUNTED COSTS OF MILITARY SERVICE: SOCIETAL BURDENS OF WAR TRAUMA; 1. Expected Mental Health Care Costs of Military Involvement; Justin T. McDaniel, Kevin Sylwester, Rick Stapel, Tim Ting, and David L. Albright; 2. Military Criminality: Responding to Predictable Occupational Hazards; from Military Service; Evan R. Seamone; 3. Generational Trends in Employment and Crime Among Military; Families; Justin T. McDaniel, Eric Black, Harvey Henson, Yorino Kawashima, Jennifer Koran, and Daniel Brown; 4. Older Veterans: Lifetime Consequences of Military Service; Kari Fletcher, Eric Black, Rachel Dekel, Mariah Rooney, Jim Martin, and David L. Albright; 5. Beyond Combat: Gender and the Construction of Injury in Military Contexts; Walter Callaghan, Maya Eichler, and Victoria Tait; PART II: THE MORAL COSTS OF WARFARE: UNDERSTANDING MORAL INJURY; 6. The Look and Feel of Moral Injury; Nancy Sherman; 7. Moral Injury, Moral Suffering, and Moral Health; Matthew Talbert and Jessica Wolfendale; 8. PTSD Weaponized: A Theory of Moral Injury; Duncan MacIntosh; 9. Remote Combat Exposure and Moral Injury from Drone Operations: The Cost of a New Form of Warfare; Elliot Atkins and Evan R. Seamone; 10. Incorporating Moral Injury in Military and Veteran Policy; Kristen Laha-Walsh, Haley Steele, and David L. Albright; PART III: MITIGATING THE UNCOUNTED COSTS OF WAR; 11. Recruiting, Training, and the Permissible Bounds of Preventing and Mitigating Moral Injury in the U.S. Military; Jesse Hamilton; 12. Pain, Addiction, and Suicidality Among Veterans: Integrating Evidence-Based, Concurrent Treatment Approaches; Evangelina Banou, Nicole Angeli, Stacey Sandusky, and Stephanie Miller; 13. Mitigating the Costs of Combat with the Code of Conduct; Kevin Govern and Stephen N. Xenakis; 14. Identifying and Treating Moral Injury in Military Members and Veterans; Julie Yeterain, Danielle S. Berke, Joel Rosenthal, and Bret Litz; 15. From Cautious to Conscious Inclusion: A Review of Womens Integration in the Armed Forces, and Where to Next; Janelle M. Pham; Index;
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