Publication | Closed Access
Afghanistan and Iraq War Veterans’ Health Care Needs and Their Underuse of Health Care Resources: Implications for Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurses
12
Citations
25
References
2014
Year
Family MedicineEducationPost-traumatic Stress DisorderTheir UnderuseMental Health InterventionMental HealthPrimary CareHelp-seeking BehaviorMilitary FamilyHealth Services ResearchU.s. VeteransPsychiatryPatient SupportNursingCommunity Mental HealthMental Health NursingHealth Care NeedsPsychiatric-mental Health NursesMedicineHealth Care Resources
U.S. Veterans who have served in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars have combat-related medical and mental health issues, notably posttraumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury, but underuse health care resources. To better understand their health care needs, resource use, and facilitators and barriers to seeking health care, a literature review was conducted. The results suggest high prevalence of mental and medical health issues and disproportionate use of quantitative research design that lacked approaches to understanding the psychosocial, cultural, and contextual factors that affect help-seeking by Veterans. Strategies to increase the likelihood that Veterans will seek needed health care, gaps in the literature, and the need for further research are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1