2. Risk and Resilience: A Review of the Health Literature of Veterans Who Identify as LGBT
Heliana Ramirez and Katharine Bloeser
3. “I Can Finally Be Me…Why Did It Take So Long?” A History of U.S. Military Policy Regarding Sexual and Gender Minority Service
Andrew C. Buchholz and Robert A. Alonso
II. Personal Experiences
4. The Reservist Perspective: Service Before and During “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”
James R. Batterson
5. Being Discharged Under Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell
Martin Chin
6. A Gay Psychologist's Account of Serving in the Army Reserves and National Guard During Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell
Clifford Trott
7. Does Anybody Have Anything They Want to Say?
Joseph E. Wise
8. Family
Monica Ormeno
9. Here/Queer/Used to It: An Account of a Post-Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Mental Health Provider
Jackson Tay
lor
III. Clinical Lessons Learned
10. Ward 52: A Haven for HIV Positive Military Personnel
Daniel W. Hicks and Steven J. Tulin
11. Creating Safe Spaces: Best Practices for Clinicians Working with Sexual and Gender Military Service Members and Veterans
Heliana Ramirez and Katharine Bloeser
12. Treating LGBT Veterans with Substance Use Disorders—A Gay Psychiatrist’s Experience
Bruce S. Hill
13. “At Least ‘Shipmate’ is a Gender-Neutral Insult” –A Military Psychiatrist’s Introduction to Transgender Military Service
Andrew C. Buchholz
14. Ethical Issues Regarding LGBT and Intersex Service Members
Edmund G. Howe
COL (Ret) Elspeth Cameron Ritchie, MD, MPH Chief, Mental Health Community Based Outpatient Clinics Washington DC VA Clinical Professor of Psychiatry George Washington University School of Medicine Professor of Psychiatry Howard University College of Medicine Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Georgetown University School of Medicine Professor of Psychiatry, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS)
Joseph E Wise, MD Major, Medical Corps, US Army Walter Reed National Military Medical Center Bethesda, MD, USA
Bryan Pyle, MSW Department of Social Work Walter Reed National Military Medical Center US Navy Bethesda, MD, USA
This volume tells the history of homosexuality in the United States military beginning in 1986, when the issue first came to the forefront of social consciousness. Each chapter is written through the eyes of gay mental healthcare providers, covering how to steadily adapt and learn to treat veterans struggling with the traumas associated with the stigma of homosexuality in service. Topics include the “Don’t-Ask-Don’t-Tell” (DADT) policy, its repeal in 2011, and addresses the current trends and challenges. Unlike any other professional book, this text includes the personal stories of gay military mental healthcare providers, as well as gay civilian clinicians who have worked with the military population in various segments in history. These accounts offer invaluable support for medical professionals working with this demographic. Chapters cover the various psychological damage service personnel encounter as it uniquely pertains to those struggling with the stigma of LGBTQ rights. Chapters include clinical pearls for particular psychiatric concerns, lessons learned for the future, and hard-earned successes as stigmas and perceptions evolved over time.
Gay Mental Healthcare Providers and Patients in the Military is an excellent resource for psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, policymakers, and all professionals who are interested in LGBTQ rights in the context of veteran psychiatry.