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Anxiety, Stress, & Coping
An International Journal
Volume 26, 2013 - Issue 5
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Article

Perceptions of stigma and barriers to care among UK military personnel deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq

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Pages 539-557 | Received 13 Apr 2012, Accepted 27 Aug 2012, Published online: 26 Sep 2012
 

Abstract

Perceived stigma and organizational barriers to care (stigma/BTC) can influence the decision to seek help for military personnel when they are suffering from mental health problems. We examined the relationship between stigmatizing beliefs, perceived BTC, and probable post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in 23,101 UK military personnel deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq both during and after deployment; and in a smaller group some six months later. Overall, our results suggest that stigma/BTC perceptions were significantly, and substantially higher during deployment than when personnel are returning home; however, within the smaller follow-up group, the rates climbed significantly over the first six-months post-deployment although they still remained lower than during-deployment levels. Male personnel, those who reported higher levels of PTSD symptoms and/or greater combat exposure were significantly more likely to endorse more stigma/BTC at both sampling points. Rates of stigma/BTC on deployment are substantially higher than rates measured when personnel are in less threatening environments. We suggest that the considerable efforts that military forces make to encourage effective help seeking should take account of the fluctuating levels of stigma/BTC. Commanders should be aware that encouraging help seeking may be more difficult in operational environments than when personnel have returned home.

Acknowledgements

The study was funded by the UK Ministry of Defence. The funding body had no input into the analysis, the final results or the interpretation of the results.

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