Chapter 11 - Opiate Use in the Military Context - Mike Colston
Chapter 12 - Use of Stimulants for ADHD and TBI in Veterans - Donna L. Ticknor and Antoinette M. Valenti
Chapter 13 - Use of Complementary and Integrative Health for Chronic Pain Management - Marina A. Khusid, Elissa L. Stern and Kathleen Reed
Chapter 14 - Traumatic Brain Injury - Blessen C. Eapen and Bruno Subbarao
Chapter 15 - Homeless Veterans and Mental Health - Kaitlin Slaven and Maria D. Llorente
Chapter 16 - Contextual Frameworks for Addressing Risk and Fostering Resilience among Sexual and Gender Minority Veterans - Rebecca Gitlin and Michael R. Kauth
Chapter 17 - Older Veterans - John T. Little, Bryan A. Llorente and Maria D. Llorente
Chapter 18 - Women Veterans - Kasey M. Llorente, Keelan K. O'Connell, Margaret Valverde and Elspeth Cameron Ritchie
Chapter 19 - Military Environmental Exposures and Mental Health - Matthew J. Reinhard, Michelle Kennedy Prisco, Nicholas G. Lezama and Elspeth Cameron Ritchie
Chapter 20 - Neuropsychiatric Quinism: Chronic Encephalopathy Caused by Poisoning by Mefloquine and Related Quinoline Drugs - Remington L. Nevin
Chapter 21 - Listening to Trauma, and Caring for the Caregiver, A Psychodynamic Reflection in the Age of Burnout - Joseph E. Wise
Elspeth Cameron Ritchie, MD, MPH Chair Department of Psychiatry Medstar Washington Hospital Center Vice Chair and Professor of Psychiatry
Georgetown University School of Medicine Professor of Psychiatry
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences 110 Irving St., N.W. East Bldg. 3105 Washington, D.C. 20010
Maria D. Llorente, MD Professor, Georgetown University School of Medicine Deputy Chief of Staff, Washington DC VA Medical Center Department of Psychiatry 50 Irving St NW Washington DC 20042
This volume explores the unique psychiatric needs of active and former military personnel and offers clinical pearls for the optimal delivery of care for these individuals. Written by experts in military and veteran psychiatry, this book addresses the most common issues in military and veteran patients, including depression, traumatic brain injury, posttraumatic stress disorder, substance use disorder, homelessness, and suicidality. Chapters highlight the characteristics of veterans suffering from each disorder that requires special treatment, making it a valuable resource for both military and civilian clinicians.
Veteran Psychiatry in the US is a valuable resource for all mental health clinicians working with or seeking to work with veterans, including psychiatrists, neurologists, primary care physicians, psychologists, counselors, social workers, nurses, residents, and all others.