PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study examines mental health toll exacted on civilians working with military in war zones

2014-04-09
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON, DC, April 9, 2014 — The punishing psychological toll endured by military personnel in war zones has been extensively documented for years by researchers, perhaps more than ever in the wake of recent military engagements in Iraq and Afghanistan.

But there has been a troubling dearth of research examining the mental health toll exacted on the large numbers of civilians who work with the military in war zones.

Sociologists Alex Bierman, an assistant professor at the University of Calgary, and Ryan Kelty, an associate professor at Washington College in Maryland, point this out in a new study, published in the most recent issue of Social Psychology Quarterly.

The study examines the experiences of United States Department of Army civilians working in Iraq and Afghanistan. The workforce of civilians employed by the military — including technicians and others working to support the military's infrastructure and capabilities — is significant. In 2009, for example, the U.S. Army employed nearly a quarter of a million civilians, with over 6,000 deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan.

Even though these civilians are not on the frontlines fighting, they are still exposed to "life threatening hazards," says Bierman. The researchers found that exposure to these hazards was relatively frequent for many of the civilians they studied — over a third of their sample reported feeling that their lives were threatened a few times a month or more.

According to Bierman, there are a number of ways these threats manifest themselves. "For example, civilians may be exposed to IEDs (improvised explosive devices)," Bierman says. "And rocket or mortar attacks on the bases are not uncommon. The protocol for civilians in these instances is to grab their gear — their Kevlar vests and gasmasks — and head to the designated shelter until they receive further notice. Civilians frequently face this sort of overwhelming threat in their environment."

Bierman and Kelty found that civilians who reported greater exposure to life-threatening experiences exhibited more frequent symptoms of psychological distress, such as depression, anxiety, and anger. The researchers also found that mental health became progressively worse as exposure to threats increased.

"It's important to understand that civilian exposure to life threatening hazards may have long-term mental health effects, and we should be offering support to these people," Bierman says.

Bierman and Kelty's future research in this area will focus on ways in which an improved workplace environment might be created for civilian workers in war zones. Even though the threats in war zones are ever present, Bierman believes that opportunities can be created within the workplace for a more supportive environment that can help reduce tension and stress in war.

INFORMATION: About the American Sociological Association and Social Psychology Quarterly The American Sociological Association, founded in 1905, is a non-profit membership association dedicated to serving sociologists in their work, advancing sociology as a science and profession, and promoting the contributions to and use of sociology by society. Social Psychology Quarterly is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal of the ASA.

The research article described above is available by request for members of the media. For a copy of the full study, contact Daniel Fowler, ASA's Media Relations and Public Affairs Officer, at (202) 527-7885 or pubinfo@asanet.org.

For more information about the study, members of the media can also contact Heath McCoy, Communications Advisor, Faculty of Arts, University of Calgary, at (403) 220-5089 or hjmccoy@ucalgary.ca.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scientists in Singapore develop novel ultra-fast electrical circuits using light-generated tunneling

Scientists in Singapore develop novel ultra-fast electrical circuits using light-generated tunneling
2014-04-09
Singapore, 9 April 2014 – Assistant Professor Christian A. Nijhuis of the Department of Chemistry at the National University of Singapore's (NUS) Faculty of Science, in collaboration with researchers from the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), namely Dr Bai Ping of the Institute of High Performance Computing and Dr Michel Bosman of the Institute of Materials Research and Engineering has successfully designed and fabricated electrical circuits that can operate at hundreds of terahertz frequencies, which is tens of thousands times faster than today's state-of-the-art ...

Physical function and sense of autonomy determine life-space mobility in older people

2014-04-09
Physical function and sense of autonomy are independent determinants of life-space mobility in older people. This was found in a study conducted at the Gerontology Research Center of the University of Jyväskylä. In this project, 848 older men and women that lived independently in the Jyväskylä region in Central Finland were interviewed at their own home. Life-space mobility reflects a person's mobility with or without the use of a vehicle. Life-space mobility reflects an individual's opportunities to participate in the society. An individual's life-space may be restricted ...

Technical tests of biodiversity

2014-04-09
What happens when physicists play (using mathematical instruments) with the genetics of populations? They may discover unexpected connections between migration and biodiversity, for example, as recently done by a group of researchers from the International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA) in Trieste and the Polytechnic University in Turin in a study published in the journal Physical Review Letters. The effect of migration on biodiversity (intended as the coexistence of different genetic traits) is an open question: does migration increase or decrease the genetic variability ...

Brain size influences development of individual cranial bones

Brain size influences development of individual cranial bones
2014-04-09
VIDEO: This shows skull and skeletal development of a 25-year-old musk shrew embryo. Click here for more information. Embryonic development in animals – except mice and rats – remains largely unexplored. For a research project at the University of Zurich, the embryos of 134 species of animal were studied non-invasively for the first time using microcomputer imaging, thus yielding globally unique data. The embryos studied came from museum collections all over the world. The international ...

USA top in the world for entrepreneurship

2014-04-09
The USA is the most entrepreneurial economy in the world, according to the 2014 Global Entrepreneurship and Development Index (GEDI). (See Notes to Editors for the complete rankings.) The GEDI index combines data on entrepreneurial activities and aspirations with data describing how well the country supports entrepreneurial activity in the US and 119 other countries across the world. The USA came top, followed by Australia and Sweden in second and third place, respectively. The researchers found that the USA is a world leader when it comes to financing new businesses ...

Researchers say Neanderthals were no strangers to good parenting

2014-04-09
Archaeologists at the University of York are challenging the traditional view that Neanderthal childhood was difficult, short and dangerous. A research team from PALAEO (Centre for Human Palaeoecology and Evolutionary Origins) and the Department of Archaeology at York offer a new and distinctive perspective which suggests that Neanderthal children experienced strong emotional attachments with their immediate social group, used play to develop skills and played a significant role in their society. The traditional perception of the toughness of Neanderthal childhood is ...

Polysaccharides from Angelica sinensis alleviate oxidative damage to neurons

Polysaccharides from Angelica sinensis alleviate oxidative damage to neurons
2014-04-09
According to traditional Chinese medicine, the roles of Angelica sinensis correlate with tonifying the blood and promoting its circulation. Recent studies have shown that extracts of Angelica sinensis have antioxidative and neuroprotective effects. However, the anti-oxidative function of Angelica sinensis polysaccharide has rarely been addressed. In a preliminary experiment from Dr. Tao Lei and colleagues from Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University in China, Angelica sinensis polysaccharides not only protected PC12 neuronal cells from H2O2-induced cytotoxicity, but also ...

Stressful environments genetically affect African American boys

Stressful environments genetically affect African American boys
2014-04-09
PRINCETON, N.J.—Stressful upbringings can leave imprints on the genes of children as young as age 9, according to a study led by Princeton University and Pennsylvania State University researchers. Such chronic stress during youth leads to physiological weathering similar to aging. A study of 40 9-year-old black boys, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shows that those who grow up in disadvantaged environments have shorter telomeres — DNA sequences that generally shrink with age — than their advantaged peers. The researchers also report ...

Unity is strength in the marketing of smallholder farm produce

2014-04-09
Smallholder farmers often face the challenge of accessing markets and selling their produce at competitive prices because they produce in small quantities that may not be commercially viable. The farmers are now being advised to adopt market interventions such as 'collective action' where they can come together as a group to pool their harvests and sell it in bulk. A study conducted by the World Agroforesty Centre (ICRAF) in Cameroon has shown that effective implementation of collective action improves market access for smallholder producers of agroforestry products ...

Is the increased risk of death due to alcohol intake greater for women or men?

Is the increased risk of death due to alcohol intake greater for women or men?
2014-04-09
New Rochelle, NY, April 9, 2014—The increased risk of death associated with alcohol intake is not the same for men and women. A study that compared the amount of alcohol consumed and death from all causes among nearly 2.5 million women and men showed that the differences between the sexes became greater as alcohol intake increased, as described in an article in Journal of Women's Health, a peer-reviewed publication from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the Journal of Women's Health website at http://www.liebertpub.com/jwh. In the article ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study sheds new light on how hormones influence decision-making and learning

Continents peel from below, triggering oceanic volcanoes

Where does continental material on islands come from?

New drug target identified in fight against resistant infections

Male pregnancy: a deep dive with seahorses

Nanopores act like electrical gates

New molecule reduces ethanol intake and drinking motivation in mice, with sex-dependent differences

AI adoption in the US adds ~900,000 tons of CO₂ annually, equal to 0.02% of national emissions

Adenosine is the metabolic common pathway of rapid antidepressant action: The coffee paradox

Vegan diet can halve your carbon footprint, study shows

Anti-amyloid therapy does not change short-term waste clearance in Alzheimer’s

Personalized interactions increase cooperation, trust and fairness

How are metabolism and cell growth connected? — A mystery over 180 years old

Novel transmission technique enables world record 430 Tb/s in a commercially available, international-standard-compliant optical fiber

Can risk prediction tools identify patients at risk of overdose or death after “before medically advised” hospital discharge?

Dreaming of fewer running injuries? Start with better sleep

USC study links ultra-processed food intake to prediabetes in young adults

How life first got moving: nature’s motor from billions of years ago

The 2nd International Conference on Civil Engineering and Smart Construction (ICCESC 2025)

Hidden catalysis: Abrasion transforms common chemistry equipment into reagents

ASH 2025 tip sheet: Sylvester researchers contribute to more than 35 oral presentations at ASH Annual Meeting

Feeling fit, but not fine: ECU study finds gap between athletes’ health perceptions and body satisfaction 

The flexible brain: How circuit excitability and plasticity shift across the day

New self-heating catalyst cleans antibiotic pollutants from water and soil

Could tiny airborne plastics help viruses spread? Scientists warn of a hidden infection risk

Breakthrough in water-based light generation: 1,000-fold enhancement of white-light output using non-harmonic two-color femtosecond lasers

Food stamp expansion in 2021 reduced odds of needy US kids going hungry

Cash transfers boost health in low- and middle-income countries

LDL cholesterol improved among veterans in program with health coaches, other resources

New study finds novel link between shared brain-gene patterns and autism symptom severity in children with autism and ADHD

[Press-News.org] Study examines mental health toll exacted on civilians working with military in war zones