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Introduction: Military sexual trauma (MST) has been a concern within our U.S. military for many years. Many interventions have been found to benefit this population, although meaning-based interventions are still lacking in this area. The purpose of this phenomenological study is to understand the meaning-making process and themes that arise for female military veterans as they narrate their experience(s) of MST.
Materials And Methods: The qualitative study consisted of six female participants, from different areas across the nation, who all reported experiencing MST during their time in service. Their experiences of MST included both sexual harassment and sexual assault. Participants completed a semi-structured interview that was analyzed using an axial coding method to discover the major themes of each participant's interview. The participants discussed the positive and negative aspects of their journey following their MST experience(s). This study's procedures were approved by Adler University's Institutional Review Board.
Results: Many found the interview to be a healing experience on their path of post-traumatic growth (PTG). There were eight major themes that arose from the data analysis under the three main domains of (1) creating a work or doing a deed, (2) experiencing something or encountering someone in a way to produce PTG, and (3) altering one's attitude toward unavoidable suffering. The eight themes were as follows: advocacy, adaptive coping, sense of family unit, psychological clarity, meaningful mantra, survivor mentality code, view of self in the world, and resiliency.
Conclusions: All participants endorsed engagement in some type of activity that fell into one of the three major domains identified above. This finding helped highlight the PTG that participants were able to experience through their meaning-making journey. There were several recommendations and study implications that were derived from this research study. With the themes introduced from this study, future treatment planning for individual survivors of MST can be better informed by the utilization of meaning-making techniques. Family and group meaning-based interventions would also be an area of continued exploration for this population. Future implications for practice are also included within this article. Significant limitations of the study include amount of participants, lack of diversity in sample population, qualitative study results, and lack of a more-personal interviewing process.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/milmed/usab528 | DOI Listing |
Mil Med
August 2025
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Naval Hospital Rota, AE 09645, Spain.
Introduction: Gynecologic care remains a critical but under-addressed component of deployed readiness. Despite the growing number of deployed female service members and the prevalence of reproductive health issues in theater, hospital corpsman receive little to no formal training in women's health topics. This study aimed to develop and implement a brief, reproducible training intervention to improve corpsman knowledge of common gynecologic concerns encountered during deployment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Interpers Violence
August 2025
Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
Empirical investigation of sexual aggression among military service members is needed to inform prevention strategies. Accordingly, the current study examined modifiable risk and protective factors of sexual aggression, including moderated associations by sex, in a sample of enlisted, active duty Navy service members ( = 478). Participants completed an online survey containing measures of demographics, risk factors (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychiatry Clin Psychopharmacol
August 2025
Department of Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, United States.
Background: Women military service members (SMs) are more likely to have posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) related to sexual assault, highlighting a need for the development and validation of therapies. A new exposure-based therapy called motion-assisted, multi-modal memory desensitization and reconsolidation (3MDR) uses participant-chosen music and images and an eye movement (EM) task in a virtual environment. Motion-assisted, multi-modal memory desensitization and reconsolidation has shown effectiveness in treating treatment-resistant male veterans; thus, this paper focuses expressly on the utility of 3MDR in female study participants, who were 50% of the full study population.
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