Military Stress And Performance: The Australian defence force experience
By (Author) George E. Kearney
By (author) Mark Creamer
By (author) Ric Marshall
By (author) Anne Goyne
Melbourne University Press
Melbourne University Press
15th June 2003
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Theory of warfare and military science
355.00994
Paperback
296
Width 270mm, Height 281mm, Spine 17mm
458g
Focuses on the impact and methods of dealing with stress in a military environment based on research in the Australian Defence Force People comprise the backbone of any military force. But what happens when the stress of operations becomes overwhelming and those people fail to cope Stress can have negative consequences for the individual, the organisation, and even for overall combat effectiveness. The Australian Defence Force has spent many years researching how to maximise individual resilience and performance in the face of extreme stress. For the first time this wealth of knowledge and experience has been brought together in one volume. This work examines the impact of highly stressful events, such as combat and peacekeeping operations, on individual troops and leaders, with a particular focus on factors that build resilience and maximise performance under stress. Managing stress is an important issue not only for the military, but equally for other high-risk professions such as the police and emergency services. This work provides a unique synthesis of a wide range of research, and clinical and personal experience, providing a coherent, integrated approach to the subject. Of particular use to mental health professionals, it will also be of interest to general readers of military and psychology books.
Professor George E. Kearney was foundation Deputy Vice-Chancellor at Griffith University, and is currently Colonel Commandant of the Australian Army Psychology Corps. Professor Mark Creamer is Director of the National Centre for Posttraumatic Health and Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Melbourne. He is a clinical psychologist with many years of experience in the field of traumatic stress from both research and clinical perspectives. Dr Ric Marshall was the foundation National Director of the Vietnam Veterans Counselling Service. He is currently head of hospital services performance evaluation with the Victorian Department of Human Services. Major Anne Goyne is a clinical psychologist with the Defence Force Psychology Organisation in Canberra. She completed a Master of Clinical Psychology at the Australian National University and has had a long involvement with military research.