January 29, 2015 - Civilian psychological health providers have an unfamiliar new clientele: service members, and their families, who are coming home after a decade of war. Although members of the U.S. Armed Forces look like their civilian peers, their life experience is very different.“The military is a distinctive culture with distinguishing signs and symbols,” said Dr. Evelyn Lewis-Clark, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences. And for civilian providers, understanding this culture “is critical to establishing tailored and effective health care services and outcomes.”
Clark spoke during a weeklong series of webinars presented jointly by the Center for Deployment Psychology and Joining Forces, a White House initiative to promote civilian support for military families.
Lack of knowledge about military culture makes it harder for civilian therapists to help the families of service members, said Maj. Demietrice Pittman, a psychologist with the Deployment Health Clinical Center, who speaks to organizations about the impact of military culture on psychological health care. read more>>>
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