Doctoral Dissertation Research: Understanding how neuroscience is changing the relationship between the state and US veterans with war disabilities

博士论文研究:了解神经科学如何改变国家与美国战争残疾退伍军人之间的关系

基本信息

  • 批准号:
    1459812
  • 负责人:
  • 金额:
    $ 2.43万
  • 依托单位:
  • 依托单位国家:
    美国
  • 项目类别:
    Standard Grant
  • 财政年份:
    2015
  • 资助国家:
    美国
  • 起止时间:
    2015-06-01 至 2019-11-30
  • 项目状态:
    已结题

项目摘要

Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI) and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) are the signature injuries of the recent US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Such injuries pose difficulties in transitioning to civilian life and long-term challenges for veterans and their families. Veterans with war-acquired disabilities constitute a population needing immediate and long-term social, vocational, and medical support. Knowledge of how veterans understand and use biomedical and neuroscientific research can enhance communication between scientists, clinicians, and veterans, and also promote improved scientific and health literacy on mTBI and PTSD. This project also aims to document veterans' unmet needs, while collaboratively identifying solutions among key stakeholders in veteran care. Finally, this study hopes to aid clinical and social understandings of the individual and deeply personal meanings attached to a diagnostic category as it moves between the bench of basic science research and the bedside of clinical practice. The results of this research will be shared with military and healthcare professionals, and among anthropologists and other social scientists interested in studies of war trauma, neuroscience, veteran health, and disability. The project also will provide for the training of an MD-PhD graduate student in anthropology.Mobilized by the need to better care for returning veterans, the US Government, clinicians, scientists, and soldiers have increasingly turned to the neurosciences to provide insights into these war-acquired disabilities. Jennifer Baldwin, under the supervision of Dr. Jane Desmond of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, will explore the emergent meanings produced by neurscientific research, and the effect of this new knowledge on how veterans, clinicians, and researchers at Veteran Affairs (VA) hospitals understand the different types of traumas with which veterans are suffering. This project employs participant-observation, interview, and community health methodologies to evaluate: a) What role do evolving neuroscientific knowledge and technologies play in transforming understandings of PTSD and mTBI for clinicians, neuroscience researchers, and veterans? b) Are research developments in the neurosciences changing how veterans diagnosed with these conditions characterize themselves, their conditions, and their life goals? And if so, how? c) What do neuroscientific explanations of war-acquired brain/mind traumas allow and disavow with regards to veterans' own understandings of their experiences at war and upon homecoming? and d) How does the use of neuroscientific knowledge and techniques by VA clinical and research spaces influence the relationship between these veterans and the state? This research contributes to the study of medical and cultural anthropology by analyzing how recent neuroscientific research on PTSD and mTBI is transforming how the state cares for returning veterans, as well as clinical, social, and veterans' perspectives about the effects of violence, trauma, and war. This study thus contributes broader insight into the relationship between medical authority, state power, and new forms of citizenship that emerge and are negotiated in VA clinical spaces.
轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)是最近美国在伊拉克和阿富汗战争中的标志性损伤。这种伤害给退伍军人及其家人过渡到平民生活带来困难和长期挑战。退伍军人与战争获得的残疾构成的人口需要立即和长期的社会,职业和医疗支持。了解退伍军人如何理解和使用生物医学和神经科学研究可以加强科学家,临床医生和退伍军人之间的沟通,并促进改善mTBI和PTSD的科学和健康素养。该项目还旨在记录退伍军人未得到满足的需求,同时在退伍军人护理的主要利益相关者中协作确定解决方案。最后,本研究希望帮助临床和社会了解个人,并在诊断类别在基础科学研究和临床实践之间移动时赋予其深刻的个人意义。这项研究的结果将与军事和医疗保健专业人员,以及对战争创伤,神经科学,退伍军人健康和残疾研究感兴趣的人类学家和其他社会科学家分享。该项目还将为人类学的一名医学博士-博士研究生提供培训。由于需要更好地照顾退伍军人,美国政府,临床医生,科学家和士兵越来越多地转向神经科学,以提供对这些战争获得的残疾的见解。伊利诺伊大学厄巴纳-香槟分校的简·德斯蒙德博士的监督下,将探讨神经科学研究产生的紧急意义,以及这种新知识对退伍军人,临床医生和退伍军人事务部(VA)医院研究人员如何理解退伍军人遭受的不同类型的创伤的影响。该项目采用参与者观察,访谈和社区健康方法来评估:a)不断发展的神经科学知识和技术在临床医生,神经科学研究人员和退伍军人转变对PTSD和mTBI的理解方面发挥了什么作用?B)神经科学的研究进展是否改变了被诊断患有这些疾病的退伍军人对自己、病情和生活目标的描述?如果是的话,怎么做?c)关于退伍军人对他们在战争中和回家后的经历的理解,神经科学对战争获得性脑/精神创伤的解释允许和否认了什么?以及d)VA临床和研究空间对神经科学知识和技术的使用如何影响这些退伍军人与国家之间的关系?这项研究有助于医学和文化人类学的研究,通过分析最近关于创伤后应激障碍和mTBI的神经科学研究如何改变国家如何照顾退伍军人,以及临床,社会和退伍军人对暴力,创伤和战争影响的看法。因此,这项研究有助于更广泛地了解医疗机构,国家权力和新形式的公民身份之间的关系,出现在VA临床空间和谈判。

项目成果

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Jane Desmond其他文献

American Observed: On International Anthropology of the U.S.
美国观察:论美国的国际人类学
  • DOI:
  • 发表时间:
    2017
  • 期刊:
  • 影响因子:
    0
  • 作者:
    Virginia Dominguez;Jasmin Habib;Jane Desmond;Ulf Hannertz; Keiko Ikeda;et al.
  • 通讯作者:
    et al.

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