Literature DB >> 35837524

Readiness of Soldiers and Adult Family Members Who Receive Behavioral Health Care: Identifying Promising Outcome Metrics.

Kimberly A Hepner, Carol P Roth, Heather Krull, Lea Xenakis, Harold Alan Pincus.   

Abstract

Behavioral health (BH) conditions-such as posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, and anxiety-are the second most common medical reasons for nondeployability in the U.S. Army. The authors of this report aimed to identify promising metrics to assess readiness among soldiers and adult family members who receive BH care. These metrics would expand the Army's outcome monitoring, which currently includes symptom improvement metrics, for patients who received BH care. The authors developed rigorous criteria to evaluate candidate readiness metrics, conducted interviews with stakeholders (Army subject-matter experts and BH providers), reviewed existing sources of data that could support the development of a readiness metric, and conducted a literature review to identify instruments that have been used to measure readiness-related domains in both military and civilian populations. The authors found that no existing data source or patient self-report instrument met criteria for implementation of a readiness metric for soldiers, but one instrument, the Walter Reed Functional Impairment Scale (WRFIS), is promising. No existing data source or patient self-report instrument met criteria for Army-wide implementation of a readiness metric for adult family members. Stakeholders reported that psychiatric symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, and impaired functioning are important indicators of lack of readiness among soldiers and adult family members. BH providers reported variability in assessing readiness and applying profiles, but behavioral experts provided suggestions for improving readiness assessment. The authors recommend that the Army conduct a pilot evaluation of a soldier readiness metric based on the WRFIS and increase standardization in applying profiles by continuing provider training.
Copyright © 2022 RAND Corporation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Health Care Quality Measurement; Mental Health Treatment; Military Health and Health Care; United States Army

Year:  2022        PMID: 35837524      PMCID: PMC9242568     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rand Health Q        ISSN: 2162-8254


  4 in total

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Authors:  Karen M Eaton; Charles W Hoge; Stephen C Messer; Allison A Whitt; Oscar A Cabrera; Dennis McGurk; Anthony Cox; Carl A Castro
Journal:  Mil Med       Date:  2008-11       Impact factor: 1.437

2.  Assessing functional impairment in a working military population: the Walter Reed functional impairment scale.

Authors:  Richard K Herrell; Edward N Edens; Lyndon A Riviere; Jeffrey L Thomas; Paul D Bliese; Charles W Hoge
Journal:  Psychol Serv       Date:  2014-08

3.  The long war and parental combat deployment: effects on military children and at-home spouses.

Authors:  Patricia Lester; Kris Peterson; James Reeves; Larry Knauss; Dorie Glover; Catherine Mogil; Naihua Duan; William Saltzman; Robert Pynoos; Katherine Wilt; William Beardslee
Journal:  J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry       Date:  2010-04       Impact factor: 8.829

4.  Prevalence of psychiatric morbidity in United States military spouses: The Millennium Cohort Family Study.

Authors:  Maria M Steenkamp; Nida H Corry; Meng Qian; Meng Li; Hope Seib McMaster; John A Fairbank; Valerie A Stander; Laura Hollahan; Charles R Marmar
Journal:  Depress Anxiety       Date:  2018-05-10       Impact factor: 6.505

  4 in total

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