Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Section 1 Pathways to resilience
- Section 2 Resilience across the lifespan
- Section 3 Resilience in families, communities, and societies
- Section 4 Specific challenges
- Section 5 Training for resilience
- 20 Interventions to enhance resilience and resilience-related constructs in adults
- 21 Childhood resilience: adaptation, mastery, and attachment
- 22 Military mental health training: building resilience
- 23 Public health practice and disaster resilience: a framework integrating resilience as a worker protection strategy
- Index
- References
22 - Military mental health training: building resilience
from Section 5 - Training for resilience
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Section 1 Pathways to resilience
- Section 2 Resilience across the lifespan
- Section 3 Resilience in families, communities, and societies
- Section 4 Specific challenges
- Section 5 Training for resilience
- 20 Interventions to enhance resilience and resilience-related constructs in adults
- 21 Childhood resilience: adaptation, mastery, and attachment
- 22 Military mental health training: building resilience
- 23 Public health practice and disaster resilience: a framework integrating resilience as a worker protection strategy
- Index
- References
Summary
For learning to take place with any kind of efficiency students must be motivated. To be motivated, they must become interested. And they become interested when they are actively working on projects which they can relate to their values and goals in life.
Gus Tuberville, President, Penn CollegeIntroduction
There is no debate that combat places tremendous psychological and physical demands on those involved. And as we learn more about how combat affects the psychological well-being of those involved, a set of central questions emerge. What can we do to prepare service members for the psychological demands of combat? What can we do to sustain the mental health and well-being of those deployed in a combat environment? What can we do to facilitate the return of these service members from the combat environment to home? In short, what do service members need to know about how combat can affect them?
In response to these questions, the US Army developed the Battlemind Training System, a mental health resilience building program (US Army Medical Command, 2007). This system established several fundamental principles of mental health training, identified key implementation principles, and defined several important terms. Throughout this chapter, the Battlemind Training System will be used as an exemplar to highlight how a military mental health training program can be created that employs theses principles of mental health training and implementation.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Resilience and Mental HealthChallenges Across the Lifespan, pp. 323 - 339Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
References
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