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International Journal of Emergency Mental Health and Human Resilience | ISSN: 1522-4821 | Volume 20

November 26-27, 2018 | Los Angeles, USA

Psychiatry, Mental Health Nursing and Healthcare

World Summit on

Applied Psychology, Psychiatry and Mental Health

International Conference on

&

A synthesis of 5 years of research on the influences of PTSD and TBI on community reintegration in

OEF/OIF veterans

David P Graham

Baylor College of Medicine, USA

Statement of the Problem:

Community reintegration (CR) describes the process of an individual’s adjustment and return to

participation in their major social roles at home, work and in the community. Estimates suggest of the 2.3 million Operation

Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) US service members deployed, over 300,000 have mild TBI

and at least 300,000 have PTSD. Negative consequences for CR in Veterans associated with mild TBI have included increased

rates of apathy, depression, anger and disinhibition and increased risk of being victims of violence and abuse. The negative

consequences for CR associated with PTSD have included decreased quality of life, increased self-reported medical and

physical symptoms, increased substance use and suicide. PTSD also has negative economic and interpersonal consequences

for Veterans including decreased work performance, increased homelessness and impaired family relationships.

Methodology &Theoretical Orientation:

This talk will be based on a synthesis of the presenter’s work completed over the past

five years and will highlight associations and points of clinical relevance among TBI, PTSD and CR.

Findings:

Mild TBI and PTSD are indirectly associated with CR ratings through increases of depression symptoms. These

associations are moderated by an individual’s genetics and Ventral Striatum integrity.

Conclusion & Significance:

Clinical providers struggle with assisting Veterans in their attempts to successfully reintegrate

into their civilian lives. Recommendations will be made how to use the information to better assist Veterans with CR efforts.

Biography

David P Graham is a native Houstonian who received a BS in Biology from Notre Dame, an MS in Zoology from Texas A&M (having studied the feeding behaviors of

American Alligators as part of my field herpetology degree), before returning to Baylor College of Medicine to attend medical school. He completed his residency in

Psychiatry at the University of New Mexico and a Health Services research fellowship at the MEDVAMC as part of the MIRECC program. He worked in the Mental

Health Care Line as a staff psychiatrist. He is an avid researcher and his focus being on the overlap of traumatic brain injury and PTSD on community reintegration.

As an Associate Professor at Baylor College of Medicine, he taught several courses to the 1st and 2nd year Psychiatry residents and mentor 3rd and 4th-year

residents both in research and clinical services.

david.graham@va.gov

David P Graham, Int J Emerg Ment Health, Volume 20

DOI: 10.4172/1522-4821-C5-023