Loading...
Effects of Resilience Strength Training on Constructs Associated with Moral Injury among Veterans
Barth, Timothy M. ; Lord, Charles G. ; Thakkar, Vishal J. ; Brock, Rita N.
Barth, Timothy M.
Lord, Charles G.
Thakkar, Vishal J.
Brock, Rita N.
Citations
Altmetric:
Soloist
Composer
Publisher
Virginia Tech Libraries
Date
2020-12-14
Additional date(s)
Abstract
Resilience Strength Training (RST) is a peer specialist program that incorporates a military squad model of group trust and bonding to address problems specific to moral injury (typically involving collapse of meaning or faith, loss of trust, self-isolation, and the failure of relationships). The training program was offered to 97 male and female veterans (ages 24-73) at two Volunteers of America (VOA) affiliates. The veterans completed measures related to moral injury prior to RST training, immediately upon completion, and 6 months after the training. RST significantly improved their reported post-traumatic growth, perceived meaning in life, propensity to trust, dispositional optimism, positive attitudes toward themselves, personal self-esteem, and sleep quality, while decreasing their dependence on both alcohol and sleep medications. These improvements were more pronounced immediately after RST but remained significant on most measures 6 months after training had ended. The results are interpreted as supportive of RST as a vehicle for addressing moral injury in veterans through development of self-calming strategies, communication skills, and self-esteem, as well as development of a peer-supported community with shared experiences.
Contents
Subject
moral injury
resilience strength training
veterans
mindfulness
sleep
resilience strength training
veterans
mindfulness
sleep
Subject(s)
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Genre
Description
Format
Department
Psychology