Foreword by Pat DeLeon and Jay M. Stone
Preface
Acknowledgments
About the Editors
Contributors
Part I: History and Culture
Chapter 1: Early History of Military Mental Health Care
Brian L. Jones
Chapter 2: History of Military Psychology
C. Alan Hopewell
Chapter 3: History of Psychology in the Department of Veterans
Affairs
Rodney R. Baker
Chapter 4: Demographics of the U.S. Military
Richard L. Dixon, Jr. and Jean M. Dixon
Chapter 5: Military Culture
Lynn K. Hall
Chapter 6: Personality and Military Service
Michael R. DeVries and Emile Wijnans
Chapter 7: Impact of Military Culture on the Clinician and Clinical
Practice
William L. Brim
Part II: Military Psychology Specialties and Programs
Chapter 8: Aeromedical Psychology
Pennie L. P. Hoofman and Wayne Chappelle
Chapter 9: Assessment of Aviators
Pennie L. P. Hoofman and Wayne Chappelle
Chapter 10: Military Neuropsychology
Mark P. Kelly
Chapter 11: Combat Operational Stress and Behavioral Health
Mark C. Russell and Charles R. Figley
Chapter 12: Forensic Psychology in the Military Setting
Paul Montalbano and Michael G. Sweda
Chapter 13: Operational Psychology
Thomas J. Williams
Chapter 14: Working with Special Operations Forces
L. Morgan Banks
Chapter 15: Command and Organizational Consultation
Paul T. Bartone and Gerald P. Krueger
Chapter 16: Human Factors Engineering and Human Performance
Michael D. Matthews
Chapter 17: Clinical Health Psychology in Military Settings
Alan L. Peterson
Chapter 18: Hostage Negotiation in the Military
Laurence Miller
Chapter 19: Mental Health Advisory Teams
A. David Mangelsdorff
Chapter 20: Comprehensive Soldier Fitness
Donna M. Brazil
Part III: Ethical and Professional Issues
Chapter 21: Multiple Relationships in the Military Setting
Jeffrey E. Barnett
Chapter 22: Managing Conflicts between Ethics and Law
W. Brad Johnson
Chapter 23: Mixed-Agency Dilemmas in Military Psychology
W. Brad Johnson
Chapter 24: Professional Education and Training for Psychologists
in the Military
Don McGeary and Cindy McGeary
Chapter 25: The Department of Defense Psychopharmacology
Demonstration Project
Morgan T. Sammons
Chapter 26: Psychologists on the Frontlines
Craig J. Bryan
Chapter 27: Provision of Mental Health Services by Enlisted Service
Members
Richard Schobitz
Chapter 28: Professional Burnout
Charles Benight and Roman Cieslak
Chapter 29: Suicide in the Military
M. David Rudd
Chapter 30: Women in Combat
Dawne Vogt and Amy E. Street
Chapter 31: Psychotherapy with Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Military
Service Members
Matthew C. Porter and Veronica Gutierrez
Chapter 32: Military Psychologists' Roles in Interrogation
Larry C. James and Lewis Pulley
Chapter 33: Interacting with the Media
Nancy A. McGarrah and Diana L. Struski
Chapter 34: Preparation and Training as a Military Psychologist
Peter J. N. Linnerooth and Brock A. McNabb
Chapter 35: The Impact of Leadership on Mental Health
Richard L. Dixon, Jr.
Chapter 36: Training Initiatives for Evidence-Based
Psychotherapies
Jeanne M. Gabriele and Judith A. Lyons
Chapter 37: Unique Challenges Faced by the National Guard and
Reserve
Michael Crabtree, Elizabeth A. Bennett, and Mary E. Schaffer
Part IV: Clinical Theory, Research, and Practice
Chapter 38: Prevalence of Mental Health Problems among Military
Populations
Sherrie L. Wilcox, Kimberly Finney, and Julie Cederbaum
Chapter 39: Challenges and Threats of Deployment
Heidi S. Kraft
Chapter 40: Post Deployment Adjustment
David S. Riggs
Chapter 41: Combat and Operational Stress Control
Kristin N. Williams-Washington and Jared Jackson
Chapter 42: Trauma and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Blair E. Wisco, Brian P. Marx, and Terence M. Keane
Chapter 43: Anxiety Disorders and Depression in Military
Personnel
Nathan A. Kimbrel and Eric C. Meyer
Chapter 44: Serious Mental Illness in the Military Setting
David F. Tharp and Eric C. Meyer
Chapter 45: Substance Use in the U.S. Active Duty Military
Robert M. Bray
Chapter 46: Substance Use Disorders among Military Personnel
Joseph Westermeyer and Nathan A. Kimbrel
Chapter 47: Traumatic Brain Injury
Melissa M. Amick, Beeta Homaifar, and Jennifer J. Vasterling
Chapter 48: Aggression and Violence
Eric B. Elbogen and Connor Sullivan
Chapter 49: Sleep Loss and Performance
William D. S. Killgore
Chapter 50: Sleep Disorders
Vincent F. Capaldi, II and Melinda C. Capaldi
Chapter 51: Grief, Loss, and War
Kent D. Drescher
Chapter 52: Early Interventions with Military Personnel
Maria M. Steenkamp and Brett T. Litz
Chapter 53: The Psychosocial Aspects and Nature of Killing
Richard J. Hughbank and Dave Grossman
Chapter 54: Military Sexual Trauma
Elizabeth H. Anderson and Alina Surís
Chapter 55: Prescription Opioid Abuse in the Military
Jennifer L. Murphy and Michael E. Clark
Chapter 56: Psychosocial Rehabilitation of Physically and
Psychological Wounded
Walter Erich Penk and Dolores Little
Chapter 57:Working with Military Children
Michelle D. Sherman and Jeanne S. Hoffman
Chapter 58: Impact of Psychiatric Disorders and Psychotropic
Medications on Retention and Deployment
David S Shearer and Colette M Candy
Chapter 59: Technology Applications in Delivering Mental Health
Services
Greg M. Reger
Chapter 60: What We have Learned from Former Prisoners of War
Brian Engdahl
Chapter 61: Clinical Research in the Military
Stacey Young-McCaughan
Chapter 62: Measuring Resilience and Growth
Lynda A. King and Daniel W. King
Chapter 63: Transitioning through the Deployment Cycle
Sherrie L. Wilcox and Michael G. Rank
Chapter 64: Aging Veterans
Avron Spiro III and Michele Karel
Chapter 65: Spiritual Resiliency in the Military Setting
William Sean Lee and Willie G. Barnes
Chapter 66: Posttraumatic Growth
Richard G. Tedeschi
Chapter 67: Ways to Bolster Resilience across the Deployment
Cycle
Donald Meichenbaum
Part V: Resources
Chapter 68: Common Military Abbreviations
Bret A. Moore
Chapter 69: Comparative Military Ranks
Bret A. Moore
Index
Dr. Bret A. Moore is founder of Military Psychology Consulting and
Adjunct Associate Professor in Psychiatry at University of Texas
Health Science Center at San Antonio.
Dr. Jeffrey E. Barnett is a Professor in the Department of
Psychology at Loyola University, Maryland, and a licensed
psychologist in independent practice in Annapolis, Maryland.
"Given the ambitious careers of editors Bret Moore and Jeffrey
Barnett, as army
psychologists as well as board certified clinicians, researchers,
and academicians in their
civilian lives, it is not surprising that their book, the first
desk reference covering military
psychology, is a comprehensive and detailed analysis of the
contributions of psychology to
military missions and culture. Overall, the book provides
convincing evidence that military psychologists and the fundamental
principles of psychology will continue to be important factors in
the changing landscape of the U.S. military-industrial complex."
-Carol Naumann McKarrin, PsycCRITIQUES
"Military Psychologists' Desk Reference is a timely compendium that
expands our understanding and appreciation of the complexity of
military psychology's past, present, and future. Important themes
resonate throughout this volume related to the central role
psychologists play in assessing, treating, and consulting to
military personnel; the myriad ethical and professional dilemmas
associated with working in military settings and ways to
effectively
manage such challenges; and the proliferation of theory, research,
and state-of-the art practice that increasingly can guide
psychologists' efforts in a military context. With chapters written
by relevant
leaders, this volume adds a needed balance to the literature and is
destined to become a classic." -- Nadine J. Kaslow, PhD, ABPP,
Professor and Vice Chair, Emory University School of Medicine, and
President (2014), American Psychological Association
"An extraordinarily rigorous and comprehensive book that addresses
every aspect of current and expanding duties of military
psychologists. It describes where military psychology was, is, and
will be. This is a must-read!" -- Robert J. Resnick, PhD, ABPP,
Randolph-Macon College; Former President, American Psychological
Association; and Recipient, Outstanding Civilian Service Medal,
Department of Army
"This amazingly comprehensive volume will help both military
psychologists and their civilian colleagues get a jump start on any
issue likely to come their way in the line of duty. It will quickly
become the first 'go to' reference for those serving our troops and
their families." -- Gerald P. Koocher, PhD, ABPP, Dean, College of
Science and Health, DePaul University, Chicago, IL
"The past decade has witnessed a dramatic increase in the
employment of military psychologists in support of missions across
the full military operational spectrum. As a result, military
psychologists can now be found not only in the clinic but in the
field as part of mental health assessment teams and care providers.
Until now, no single text has documented the wide array of roles
psychologists perform as military psychologists in the service to
the Nation.
This book provides authoritative information on the various roles
and responsibilities of military psychologists serving military
personnel and their families. This book is a must-read for
anyone
interested in working as a military psychologist in today's
military organization." -- Armando X. Estrada, PhD, Editor-in-Chief
(2008-2013), Military Psychology, and President (2011), Society for
Military Psychology
"As core faculty and the coordinator of the Military Clinical
Psychology Track in the Adler School of Professional Psychology's
Doctor of Psychology in Clinical Psychology program, Drs. Moore and
Barnett have crafted a military psychologists' desk reference that
significantly enhances my military clinical psychology track
curriculum and meets my goal of ensuring that budding student
psychologists and those post-doctoral will have an indispensable
desk reference
at the ready to assist them in their practice. Feedback that I've
received from my students thus far include, and I paraphrase: it's
accessible and comprehensive; the chapters are concise and
filled
with essential information only making it a more desirable read;
and the cost is absolutely reasonable. Bravo to Moore and Barnett
for creating such a comprehensive, meaningful, and useful text for
both the classroom and clinical practice. It's certainly one of my
favorites!" -Grady L. Garner, Jr., Ph.D., Adler School of Prof.
Psychology
Featured in -PRU - PANORAMA RISORSE UMANE / PANORAMA HUMAN
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