Considerations for Acute and Emergent Deployed Mental Health Patient Management and Theater Transports: A Scoping Review

Author:

Migliore Laurie1ORCID,Braun Lisa2,Stucky Christopher H3,Gardner Cubby4,Huffman Sarah5,Jumpp Savannah1,Bell Emily6

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Investigation Facility, David Grant USAF Medical Center, Fairfield, CA 94533, USA

2. Nursing Research, Naval Medical Center, Portsmouth, VA 23708, USA

3. Center for Nursing Science & Clinical Inquiry, Womack Army Medical Center, Fort Bragg, NC 28310, USA

4. Air Force Medical Readiness Agency, Falls Church, VA 22041, USA

5. Airman Readiness Optimization Division, 711th Human Performance Wing, Dayton, OH 45433, USA

6. TriService Nursing Research Program, Uniformed Services University, Bethesda, MD 20814, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Although combat stress and psychiatric casualties of war have consistently contributed to the need for deployed patient transport to higher echelons of care, little is known regarding specific evidence-based strategies for providing psychological support and optimal transport interventions for warriors. Study Objective The purpose of this scoping review is to map existing literature related to considerations for deployed mental health patient transport. The review’s primary aims are to identify the existing scientific research evidence, determine research and training gaps, and recommend critical areas for future military research. Methods We used Arksey and O’Malley’s six-stage scoping review methodological framework (identify the research question, identify relevant studies, select studies, chart data, report results, and consultation). Using a systematic search strategy, we evaluated peer-reviewed literature from five databases (PubMed, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Web of Science, and Embase) and gray literature from the Defense Technical Information Center. All publications were independently screened for eligibility by two researchers during three review rounds (title, abstract, and full text). Results We identified 1,384 publications, 61 of which met our inclusion criteria. Most publications and technical reports were level IV evidence and below, primarily retrospective cohort studies and epidemiologic surveillance reports. Few rigorously designed studies were identified. Eight research themes and a variety of research and critical training gaps were derived from the reviewed literature. Themes included (1) characterizing mental health patients aeromedically evacuated from theater; (2) in-flight sedation medications; (3) need for aeromedical evacuation (AE) in-theater education, training, and guidelines for staff; (4) epidemiological surveillance of AE from theater; (5) mental health management in deployed settings; (6) suicide-related event management; (7) transport issues for mental health patients; and (8) psychological stressors of AE. Research is needed to establish clinical practice guidelines for mental health condition management in theater and throughout the continuum of en route care.

Funder

TriService Nursing Research Program, Uniformed Services University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

Reference77 articles.

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2. Medical evacuations from Afghanistan during Operation Enduring Freedom, active and reserve components, U.S. Armed Forces, 7 October 2001-31 December 2012;Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center;Med Surveill Mon Rep,2013

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4. Medical evacuations out of the U.S. Central Command, active and reserve components, U.S. Armed Forces, 2018;Armed Forces Health Surveillance Branch;Med Surveill Mon Rep,2019

5. Clinical practice guidelines;Joint Trauma System: The Department of Defense Center of Excellence for Trauma,2020

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