| Literature DB >> 34095067 |
Cynthia Mikolas1,2, Hope Winfield2,3, Lorraine Smith-MacDonald2,4, Ashley Pike2,5, Chelsea Jones2,4,6, Melina Lee7, Jennifer Griffiths2, Ryan Perry2, David M Olson8, Alexandra Heber9,10, Joanne Olson7, Phillip R Sevigny2,11, Suzette Brémault-Phillips2,5.
Abstract
Introduction: A new vision of resilience and well-being for Canadian military service members (SMs), Veterans and their families has been championed by the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) and Veterans Affairs Canada (VAC). Operationalizing this vision, which aims to support those who serve/have served and their families as they navigate life during and post-service, requires the support of service providers (SPs). Training SPs to deliver complementary resilience-training programs Reaching In… Reaching Out (RIRO; for adults working with parents of young children) and Bounce Back and Thrive! (BBT; for parents of children aged 0-8 years of age) may support this vision. Objective: To assess the appropriateness of RIRO/BBT trainer training for SPs, and RIRO and BBT resilience-training for military populations and families.Entities:
Keywords: community; families; mental health—related quality of life; military; program evaluation (MeSH); resilience; well-being
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34095067 PMCID: PMC8173033 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.662313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Total health and wellness domains (3).
| 1 | Physical | An individual's physical body and may include genetic, environmental, psychophysical, or behavioural components. |
| 2 | Mental | Includes cognitive, affective, and behavioural sub-domains. |
| 3 | Ethical/spiritual | Ethical awareness, justification of moral beliefs, spirituality (may or may not be aligned with a religious tradition), meaning and purpose. |
| 4 | Social/cultural | Larger social circles that individuals participate in such as community (special interest groups, sporting, and cultural groups, etc.) |
| 5 | Family | Persons intimately involved in one's life, such as co-habitual partners, dependants, extended family, in-laws, and/or close friends who are perceived as family. |
| 6 | Financial | Financial literacy and management ability, and overall net worth. |
| 7 | Psychosocial work environment | The design and management of work, and contexts that could impact (positively or negatively) an employee's well-being. |
| 8 | Physical work environment | The physical workplace (building, workspace, air quality etc.). |
| 9 | Physical home environment | Type and quality of housing one lives in and neighbourhood which impacts safety, access to community services, schools, and important amenities. |
Elements of community resilience as proposed by Patel et al. (12).
| A | Local knowledge | - Factual knowledge | Community members must possess an understanding of their potential vulnerabilities and a belief that they are able to overcome hardships. |
| B | Community networks and relationships | - Connexion | Development of strong links between community members creates a sense of community connectedness and cohesion. |
| C | Communication | - Effective communication | Use of common language, meanings and understandings, in addition to the provision of space for individuals to articulate their needs, views, and attitudes allows for open dialogue. |
| D | Health | - Physical health | Understanding and treating physical and mental health needs mitigates additional risks of long-term recoveries after crisis situations. |
| E | Governance/leadership | - Infrastructure and services | Timely and effective responses, along with the involvement of the community for planning responses and recovery increases trust risk and crisis communication. |
| F | Resources | Appropriate access and allocation of tangible (e.g., food), technical resources (e.g., shelter), and financial and social resources are hypothesised to be connected to community resilience. | |
| G | Economic investment | - Economic programming | Proactive investments should ensure interventions are cost-effective and should consider specific needs for a post-disaster community. |
| H | Preparedness | Individual, family, and government levels must be considered in planning for crisis, prevention, and response and recovery. | |
| I | Mental outlook | Enhancement of mental outlook is conducive toward development of resilient attitudes, feelings, and views in the face of uncertainty, including incorporation of both hope and adaptability. | |
Reaching In… Reaching Out and Bounce Back and Thrive! Sessions and objectives.
| - Resilience, relaxation, and noticing thoughts | - Resilience and family strengths | ||
| - Stress and resilience in children | - Empathy | ||
Themes, subthemes, and supportive quotes and resilience domains/core elements.
| Service provider capacity-building | Enhances role modelling | “ | 2, 3, 4, 5, 7 |
| Offers useful, simple, applicable and understandable tools | “ | 2, 4, 5, 7 | |
| Increases personal and professional awareness of thoughts and behaviours | “ | 2, 4, 5, 6 | |
| Offers a mechanism for SP capacity-building | “ | 4, 5, 7 | |
| Community and family application | Provides helpful skills and strategies | “ | 2 |
| Supports family building | “ | 2, 5 | |
| Enhances understanding of behaviours | “ | 2, 4, 5, 6 | |
| Resilient environments | Supports community resilience-building | “ | 2, 4, 5, 7 |
| Cultivates a common language | “ | 2, 4, 5 | |
| Benefits the community | “ | 4, 5, 7 | |
| Usability | Is culturally adaptable/sensitive | “ | 4, 5, 7 |
| Lends itself to flexible program delivery | “ | 5 | |
| Enriches community outreach | “ | 2, 4, 5, 7 |