Military Culture and Post-Military Transitioning Among Veterans: A Qualitative Analysis

While a considerable amount of theoretical literature has explored core values and characteristics of the U.S. Armed Forces, limited empirical research has examined veterans’ accounts of military culture. To elucidate military culture and help inform ongoing efforts to incorporate military culture i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wesley H McCormick, Joseph M. Currier, Steve L. Isaak, Brook M. Sims, Brett A. Slagel, Timothy D. Carroll, Karl Hamner, David L. Albright
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Virginia Tech Libraries 2019-08-01
Series:Journal of Veterans Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal-veterans-studies.org/articles/121
_version_ 1818758329876348928
author Wesley H McCormick
Joseph M. Currier
Steve L. Isaak
Brook M. Sims
Brett A. Slagel
Timothy D. Carroll
Karl Hamner
David L. Albright
author_facet Wesley H McCormick
Joseph M. Currier
Steve L. Isaak
Brook M. Sims
Brett A. Slagel
Timothy D. Carroll
Karl Hamner
David L. Albright
author_sort Wesley H McCormick
collection DOAJ
description While a considerable amount of theoretical literature has explored core values and characteristics of the U.S. Armed Forces, limited empirical research has examined veterans’ accounts of military culture. To elucidate military culture and help inform ongoing efforts to incorporate military culture into the provision of healthcare services for veterans, seven focus groups (n = 44) were conducted with diverse groups of veterans to provide their first-hand accounts on these topics. Content analysis of their responses yielded four broad clusters: (1) descriptions of military culture and values (e.g., patriotism, camaraderie, discipline), (2) conflict with values during military service (e.g., betrayed by politicians/bureaucracy, internal conflict of killing), (3) cultural changes post-military service (e.g., continuity of military values/culture, disparate from civilian culture, interpersonal difficulties), and (4) communication with non-military connected persons (e.g., I do not talk about military experiences, I only talk with other veterans). The results expand upon prior conceptualizations of military culture and provide preliminary implications for integrating military culture into healthcare service provisions for veterans. Furthermore, this study highlights the need for further empirical research on the internalization and longer-term impact of military culture to better address the needs of those who served in the U.S. Armed Forces.
first_indexed 2024-12-18T06:25:06Z
format Article
id doaj.art-48081ebcad3f4823be6f01f2309c5568
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2470-4768
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-18T06:25:06Z
publishDate 2019-08-01
publisher Virginia Tech Libraries
record_format Article
series Journal of Veterans Studies
spelling doaj.art-48081ebcad3f4823be6f01f2309c55682022-12-21T21:18:04ZengVirginia Tech LibrariesJournal of Veterans Studies2470-47682019-08-014228829810.21061/jvs.v4i2.121103Military Culture and Post-Military Transitioning Among Veterans: A Qualitative AnalysisWesley H McCormick0Joseph M. Currier1Steve L. Isaak2Brook M. Sims3Brett A. Slagel4Timothy D. Carroll5Karl Hamner6David L. Albright7University of South AlabamaUniversity of South AlabamaUniversity of South AlabamaUniversity of South AlabamaUniversity of South AlabamaUniversity of South AlabamaUniversity of AlabamaUniversity of AlabamaWhile a considerable amount of theoretical literature has explored core values and characteristics of the U.S. Armed Forces, limited empirical research has examined veterans’ accounts of military culture. To elucidate military culture and help inform ongoing efforts to incorporate military culture into the provision of healthcare services for veterans, seven focus groups (n = 44) were conducted with diverse groups of veterans to provide their first-hand accounts on these topics. Content analysis of their responses yielded four broad clusters: (1) descriptions of military culture and values (e.g., patriotism, camaraderie, discipline), (2) conflict with values during military service (e.g., betrayed by politicians/bureaucracy, internal conflict of killing), (3) cultural changes post-military service (e.g., continuity of military values/culture, disparate from civilian culture, interpersonal difficulties), and (4) communication with non-military connected persons (e.g., I do not talk about military experiences, I only talk with other veterans). The results expand upon prior conceptualizations of military culture and provide preliminary implications for integrating military culture into healthcare service provisions for veterans. Furthermore, this study highlights the need for further empirical research on the internalization and longer-term impact of military culture to better address the needs of those who served in the U.S. Armed Forces.https://journal-veterans-studies.org/articles/121service members, veterans, military culture, post-military transition, healthcare
spellingShingle Wesley H McCormick
Joseph M. Currier
Steve L. Isaak
Brook M. Sims
Brett A. Slagel
Timothy D. Carroll
Karl Hamner
David L. Albright
Military Culture and Post-Military Transitioning Among Veterans: A Qualitative Analysis
Journal of Veterans Studies
service members, veterans, military culture, post-military transition, healthcare
title Military Culture and Post-Military Transitioning Among Veterans: A Qualitative Analysis
title_full Military Culture and Post-Military Transitioning Among Veterans: A Qualitative Analysis
title_fullStr Military Culture and Post-Military Transitioning Among Veterans: A Qualitative Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Military Culture and Post-Military Transitioning Among Veterans: A Qualitative Analysis
title_short Military Culture and Post-Military Transitioning Among Veterans: A Qualitative Analysis
title_sort military culture and post military transitioning among veterans a qualitative analysis
topic service members, veterans, military culture, post-military transition, healthcare
url https://journal-veterans-studies.org/articles/121
work_keys_str_mv AT wesleyhmccormick militarycultureandpostmilitarytransitioningamongveteransaqualitativeanalysis
AT josephmcurrier militarycultureandpostmilitarytransitioningamongveteransaqualitativeanalysis
AT stevelisaak militarycultureandpostmilitarytransitioningamongveteransaqualitativeanalysis
AT brookmsims militarycultureandpostmilitarytransitioningamongveteransaqualitativeanalysis
AT brettaslagel militarycultureandpostmilitarytransitioningamongveteransaqualitativeanalysis
AT timothydcarroll militarycultureandpostmilitarytransitioningamongveteransaqualitativeanalysis
AT karlhamner militarycultureandpostmilitarytransitioningamongveteransaqualitativeanalysis
AT davidlalbright militarycultureandpostmilitarytransitioningamongveteransaqualitativeanalysis