Non-psychotic psychiatric disorders in persons who have experienced psychosocial stress in terms of military conflict.

Partners of military veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other non-psychotic psychiatric disorders can develop difficulties with stress, well-being, and secondary trauma. There are various interventions involving partners, but not many of them give due attention to their well-bei...

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Main Authors: L. M. Yuryeva, T. Y. Shusterman, E. O. Likholetov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SE "Dnipropetrovsk medical academy of Health Ministry of Ukraine" 2019-12-01
Series:Medičnì Perspektivi
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.uran.ua/index.php/2307-0404/article/view/189601
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spelling doaj-f02e4ff852634f788aa0eb85cb88ffc42020-11-25T00:51:40ZengSE "Dnipropetrovsk medical academy of Health Ministry of Ukraine"Medičnì Perspektivi2307-04042019-12-0124411212010.26641/2307-0404.2019.4.189601189601Non-psychotic psychiatric disorders in persons who have experienced psychosocial stress in terms of military conflict.L. M. YuryevaT. Y. ShustermanE. O. LikholetovPartners of military veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other non-psychotic psychiatric disorders can develop difficulties with stress, well-being, and secondary trauma. There are various interventions involving partners, but not many of them give due attention to their well-being. The purpose of this article was to conduct a systematic literature review of a number of interventions with analysis of the results. A systematic literature search was conducted, as a result of which 25 interventions were selected for analysis. The criteria for selecting interventions were the presence of PTSD in the veteran, the partner’s participation in the intervention, and the focus of the intervention on improving the well-being of the partners themselves. Group interventions, boarding classes, family therapies and retreats were the main types of interventions. 21 studies reported well-being results from randomized controlled trials (RCT), preliminary evaluations and clinical cases. Most interventions reported improvements in partner well-being, although reliable, controlled trials were insufficient. Only a small number of interventions were aimed solely at part­ners. The most common feature of the interventions was psycho-educational work with an emphasis on topics such as communication, problem solving, and regulation of emotions. Most of the works describe the advantages of group processes (social support and normalization) among partners who shared experience with each other. Thus, the existing range of formats of measures to improve the well-being of military partners should be expanded through more reliable experimental studies aimed directly at the well-being of partners. A subsequent study of their effectiveness can serve as a powerful resource for further interventions not only for veterans, but also for the partners themselves.http://journals.uran.ua/index.php/2307-0404/article/view/189601militarypartnersveteransptsdinterventions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author L. M. Yuryeva
T. Y. Shusterman
E. O. Likholetov
spellingShingle L. M. Yuryeva
T. Y. Shusterman
E. O. Likholetov
Non-psychotic psychiatric disorders in persons who have experienced psychosocial stress in terms of military conflict.
Medičnì Perspektivi
military
partners
veterans
ptsd
interventions
author_facet L. M. Yuryeva
T. Y. Shusterman
E. O. Likholetov
author_sort L. M. Yuryeva
title Non-psychotic psychiatric disorders in persons who have experienced psychosocial stress in terms of military conflict.
title_short Non-psychotic psychiatric disorders in persons who have experienced psychosocial stress in terms of military conflict.
title_full Non-psychotic psychiatric disorders in persons who have experienced psychosocial stress in terms of military conflict.
title_fullStr Non-psychotic psychiatric disorders in persons who have experienced psychosocial stress in terms of military conflict.
title_full_unstemmed Non-psychotic psychiatric disorders in persons who have experienced psychosocial stress in terms of military conflict.
title_sort non-psychotic psychiatric disorders in persons who have experienced psychosocial stress in terms of military conflict.
publisher SE "Dnipropetrovsk medical academy of Health Ministry of Ukraine"
series Medičnì Perspektivi
issn 2307-0404
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Partners of military veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other non-psychotic psychiatric disorders can develop difficulties with stress, well-being, and secondary trauma. There are various interventions involving partners, but not many of them give due attention to their well-being. The purpose of this article was to conduct a systematic literature review of a number of interventions with analysis of the results. A systematic literature search was conducted, as a result of which 25 interventions were selected for analysis. The criteria for selecting interventions were the presence of PTSD in the veteran, the partner’s participation in the intervention, and the focus of the intervention on improving the well-being of the partners themselves. Group interventions, boarding classes, family therapies and retreats were the main types of interventions. 21 studies reported well-being results from randomized controlled trials (RCT), preliminary evaluations and clinical cases. Most interventions reported improvements in partner well-being, although reliable, controlled trials were insufficient. Only a small number of interventions were aimed solely at part­ners. The most common feature of the interventions was psycho-educational work with an emphasis on topics such as communication, problem solving, and regulation of emotions. Most of the works describe the advantages of group processes (social support and normalization) among partners who shared experience with each other. Thus, the existing range of formats of measures to improve the well-being of military partners should be expanded through more reliable experimental studies aimed directly at the well-being of partners. A subsequent study of their effectiveness can serve as a powerful resource for further interventions not only for veterans, but also for the partners themselves.
topic military
partners
veterans
ptsd
interventions
url http://journals.uran.ua/index.php/2307-0404/article/view/189601
work_keys_str_mv AT lmyuryeva nonpsychoticpsychiatricdisordersinpersonswhohaveexperiencedpsychosocialstressintermsofmilitaryconflict
AT tyshusterman nonpsychoticpsychiatricdisordersinpersonswhohaveexperiencedpsychosocialstressintermsofmilitaryconflict
AT eolikholetov nonpsychoticpsychiatricdisordersinpersonswhohaveexperiencedpsychosocialstressintermsofmilitaryconflict
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