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Combat and Operational Stress Control in Iraq: Extreme Occupational

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Title: Combat and Operational Stress Control in Iraq: Extreme Occupational


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Combat and Operational Stress Control in Iraq
Extreme Occupational Organizational Psychiatry
  • Paul S. Hammer, MD
  • Commander, Medical Corps, US Navy
  • Division Psychiatrist
  • 1st Marine Division

3
Agenda
  • Overview of Combat and Operational Stress Control
    Doctrine in the US military.
  • Brief Overview of how COSC concepts are practiced
    today
  • Development and Role of the Marine Expeditionary
    Force Psychiatrist
  • Combat Psychiatry as a model for Occupational
    and Organizational Psychiatry

4
Historical Roots Shell Shock to PTSD
5
Thoughts to Consider
  • Combat Stress is not new
  • History and Literature have examined the behavior
    of men in battle for millennia.
  • Iliad Achilles mutilates Hector
  • Odyssey Metaphorical long trip home for Odysseus
  • Thucydides Peloponnesian War
  • Arthurian Legend
  • El Cid
  • Roland

6
What Is New
  • Better understanding of the nature of stress
  • Less emphasis on character and weakness
  • More emphasis on common biological/physiological
    events
  • Separating cowardice from stress-this question
    needs to be addressed
  • Ability to survive in battle
  • Vietnam first war where combat casualties
    outnumbered NBDI
  • Better body armor
  • The nature of warfare
  • Efficient weapons
  • Ability to kill large numbers with minimal effort

7
Historical Roots Civil War
  • Psychiatric Syndromes
  • Nostalgia
  • Soldiers Heart
  • Stephen Crane Red Badge of Courage
  • Gatling gun invented

8
Historical Roots World War I
  • Shell Shock
  • 1st empirical evidence that early intervention
    reduces chronic psychiatric morbidity
  • Thomas Salmon develops PIES Principles
  • Proximity
  • Immediacy
  • Expectancy
  • Simplicity

9
After Effects from WWI Shell Shock
  • Britain
  • 200,000 Vets being treated and drawing pensions
  • 40,000 for War Neurosis
  • U.S.
  • 38 of all hospitalized veterans in 1919 had
    mental disorders
  • Led to creation of Veterans Administration

10
Historical Roots WWII
  • Lessons forgotten between the wars
  • Salmons PIE Principles
  • re-learned and re-developed
  • Effectively implemented
  • Battle of Okinawa
  • High combat stress casualty rates
  • Evacuation to CRTS

11
Historical Evidence WWII
  • The British numbers
  • By 1945 43,600 were receiving disability
    pensions from the British Army for mental
    disorders
  • The U.S. numbers
  • By 1945 50,662 still hospitalized in VA medical
    centers for psych reasons
  • By 1947 286,000 getting VA disability pensions
    for mental disorders
  • By 1951 Only 67 of them had achieved a
    satisfactory occupational and family adjustment
  • By 1972 44,000 WW-II combat stress patients were
    still occupying beds in VA hospitals

12
Important Historical Roots and Influences Cont.
  • 1944 Coconut Grove Fire
  • Lindemanns observations from of grief reactions
  • modern era of crisis intervention
  • 1963/64 Caplans 3 tiers of preventive psychiatry
  • primary-, secondary-, and tertiary prevention
    implemented in Community Mental Health System

13
Development of Crisis Intervention
  • 1960s/70s Crisis intervention principles
    applied to reduction of hospitalizations of
    potentially chronic
  • 1974 Early work on crisis and stress in
    emergency services personnel Mitchells CISD
    formulated
  • 1980 Formal recognition of PTSD in DSM-III
  • legitimizes examination of crisis and traumatic
    events as threats to long-term health

14
Historical Evidence Vietnam
  • Criteria for PTSD formulated in 1980
  • National Vietnam Veterans Readjustment Study
    (NVVRS) in the late 1980's
  • More than 70 of VN combat vets had at least one
    persistent symptom of PTSD
  • 35 of total met the full diagnostic criteria for
    the disorder
  • Other estimates of PTSD in VN vets range from
    VA's official 15 (450,000) to 1.5 million

15
Disaster Mental Health Intervention
  • 1982 Air Florida 90 Crash Wash. DC
  • 1st mass use of CISD
  • psych support for emergency response personnel
  • 1986 Violence in the workplace
  • deaths of 13 postal workers on the job

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History, Roots and Influences
  • Yom Kippur War
  • Oct 1973
  • Israelis completely surprised
  • Rushed in unprepared reserves
  • High combat stress casualties
  • MOOTW
  • 1994 Rwanda Massacres
  • Canadian Peacekeepers had insufficient troops and
    restrictive mandate

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Roots and Influences, continued
  • 2000 Mass casualty shooting at Columbine H.S.
    leads to re-exam of youth/school violence issues
  • 2000 Increased international concern for
    terrorism (e.g., USS COLE incident), including
    nuke, bio, and chem terrorism

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Roots and Influences
  • 9/11
  • 2002-Present Afghanistan Operation Enduring
    Freedom
  • 2003-Present Iraq Operation Iraqi Freedom

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Current Situation
  • Nature of warfare has changed
  • Sustained combat operations now different
  • Evolution of knowledge base regarding stress and
    stress syndromes
  • Evolution of Interventions and Therapies
  • Troops need help
  • Maintain ability to function and perform duties
  • Treat wounds when they occur
  • Stigma, barriers and misconceptions still exist

20
Combat and Operational Stress Control in the US
Military
21
Combat and Operational Stress Control in the US
military
  • Army
  • Navy

22
Army CSC Doctrine
  • Mission of US Army
  • Mission of Army Medical Dept.
  • Mission of Army Mental Health/Combat Stress
    Control

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Army MH Teams
  • Division Psychiatry
  • Organic to Division Units
  • Staffed by Mental Health Professionals
  • Treatment and Prevention Missions
  • Combat Stress Control Companies
  • Subordinate Unit of Combat Support Hospital
  • Area support to units
  • Prevention Teams
  • Treatment Teams
  • Recuperation Centers

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Doctrinal Principles
  • Conserve the fighting force
  • Preventive Interventions
  • Early Treatment
  • Early Return to Duty
  • Communication and Liaison with commands
  • Appropriate distribution of personnel

25
CSC Functions
  • Briefing
  • Educating
  • Teaching
  • Facilitating Debriefings
  • Leading Debriefings
  • Assessment

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US Navy-Marine Corps CSC Doctrine
  • Navy Medicine relationship with Marine Corps
  • Principles essentially identical to Army
  • Less emphasis on Debriefings
  • Two Major Segments
  • CSC Teams in Surgical Companies
  • Division Psychiatry/OSCAR Program

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USMC Combat Organization 101
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Surgical Company Combat Stress Team
  • General Area Support
  • Manning
  • Psychiatrist
  • Psychologist
  • 2 Psychiatric Technicians

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Brief Overview of how COSC concepts are practiced
today
  • Army CSC Companies
  • Prevention Teams
  • Treatment Teams
  • Navy-Marine Corps OSCAR Teams
  • Embedding MH within Regimental Combat Teams

30
Combat Psychiatry as a Model for Organizational
Psychiatry
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I MEF Psychiatrist
  • What it is and what we did in Iraq recently.

32
Development and Role of the Marine Expeditionary
Force Psychiatrist
  • Problem of individual vs. unified approaches
  • Inconsistent application with providers
  • Need to reinvigorate the concept of Division
    Psychiatrist
  • Need for someone to oversee the system
  • Professional supervision
  • Drive outreach effort

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Organizational Role of Force Psychiatrist
  • Develop the System
  • Strategic Focus
  • Develop consistency
  • Collect Data
  • Informed Decisions
  • Mentor MH Professionals
  • Teach less experienced MH prof
  • Fold into system
  • Influence the culture
  • Care
  • Help the stressed
  • Actual nuts and bolts of what we do.

System
Mentor
Care
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Develop and Monitor the system
  • Concept of a System
  • Combat theater different from garrison
  • Coherent Theory and practice
  • Working together vs. individually
  • Outreach Effort
  • Not bringing the clinic to the sand!
  • 50 of time doing this.
  • Need for Data
  • Targeting services to affected populations
  • Combat Trauma Record (CTR) for Psych

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Mentoring MH Professionals in Combat Psychiatry
  • Team members
  • Psychiatric Technicians
  • Psychologists
  • Psychiatrists
  • Many with little or no experience in Operational
    Environment
  • Tendency is to fall back to the familiar and
    comfortable
  • Outreach doomed unless it is accountable to
    someone above.

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Help The Stressed
  • Pt focused
  • Focus on function
  • What treatments work and what dont?
  • How do we get treatment to those who need it?
  • Skill in Disposition
  • Medevac
  • Maintain in Theater
  • Competencies
  • Diagnoses
  • PTSD
  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Psychotherapy
  • Cognitive
  • Psychodynamic
  • Brief
  • Interpersonal
  • Medications

37
Combat Psychiatry as Model
  • Focus on function
  • Crucial need to function
  • Consequences of failure to function
  • Balancing stress exposure with functional loss
  • Maintaining function vs. psychopathology and
    treatment
  • Resilience in the face of extreme stress
  • Fostering resilience in vivo
  • Bolstering resilience deficiencies

38
Future Directions
  • Comprehensive Combat Mental Health System
    Initiative in I MEF
  • Dynamic Combat and Operational Stress Control
    (COSC) System Revision
  • PAO Piece
  • Individual-Unit-Leader Training
  • Fostering Culture Change

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Questions?Discussion?
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