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Military Psychology Podcast
Military Psychology Podcast
Author: Division 19
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Stay up to date with the most important issues in military psychology with the Society for Military Psychology, Division 19 of the American Psychological Association. We are producing several short series on applying psychological principles in military settings and military populations. This Military Psychology Podcast Network will feature topics including diversity in the military, the psychology of consulting with military organizations, behavioral health in military and veteran populations, human factors research, and specialty areas including operational and aviation psychology, fitness for duty and selection decisions, and military ethics. We’ll be addressing the broad question “What is military psychology?” and answering it in a number of ways. We are releasing all series in one feed to make it easy to stay up-to-date on the latest research, policy, and practice considerations. Subscribe to the Military Psychology Podcast Network feed for free access, and follow the Society for Military Psychology at www.militarypsych.org and on social media at @APADIV19.
26 Episodes
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Jillian C. Shipherd, Ph.D. is a clinical research psychologist, professor of psychiatry, and co-director for the Veterans Health Administration’s LGBT Health Program. With over 100 peer-reviewed publications and a book (!), Dr. Shipherd is a top scholar on the wellbeing of LGBTQ veterans. She’s dedicated her skills to improving the healthcare system to care for this unique population, and we discuss ways in which the DoD may build on the VA’s progress. Dr. Shipherd is the kind of person you want assigned to be on your team for a group project. She’s thorough, a wealth of knowledge, and walks the walk. If you’d rather listen to a conversation on LGBTQ wellbeing than read dozens of research papers, then this episode is for you! Resources referenced in this episode:Healthcare Equality Index 2020: https://www.hrc.org/resources/healthcare-equality-indexVA LGBT Health Program and LGBT Veteran Care Coordinators: https://www.patientcare.va.gov/lgbt/
Lt Col Julie Glover is a Physician Assistant in the U.S. Air Force, holds a Doctorate in Emergency Medicine, has deployed thrice, and has held a number of leadership roles. I knew her back when she was Capt Glover (!) and we were stationed together in northern Italy. We bonded over our love of cats, softball, and LGBTQ rights. In this episode, Lt Col Glover discusses the impact that repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell had on her ‘outness’ to military colleagues, her experiences disclosing her sexual orientation to military medical providers and her bosses, as well as the process of reckoning with negative religious messaging about same-sex desire. She also talks about her long-time girlfriend and what it’s been like to be in a same-sex relationship in the military. Lt Col Glover is one of those people who is constantly winning awards, earning more and more degrees, and remains startlingly humble. (That last sentence would make her very uncomfortable.)
Our inaugural episode for the LGBTQ Military series features a talk with Lt Col Bree Fram. She’s an astronautical engineer, published author, transgender advocate, and delightful person. We cover her impressive military career, including working at the Pentagon...twice(!), we talk 'misgendering,' 'passing,' and self-disclosure. Lt Col Fram also invites medical providers and mental health professionals to provide affirming care to LGBTQ patients...and tells us how. Acknowledging that we live in a unique historical time, one of open LGBTQ service, she provides a fresh perspective on how military leaders can harness the unique leadership skills that this community brings to the workplace.Resources referenced in this episode:-Disclosure documentary: https://www.netflix.com/title/81284247-Lt Col Fram's forthcoming book: https://nyupress.org/9781479801053/with-honor-and-integrity/-SPARTA: https://spartapride.org/
Selecting a career path is a daunting task. Whether we are helping new recruits to choose their first MOS, counseling current subordinates looking to make a switch, or helping our peers who are transitioning back to civilian life, the role of psychology in these decisions is significant. Please join Dr. Jeremy Jinkerson as he sits down with Dr. Brianna Werner to discuss Vocational Psychology and the role it plays in these critical conversations!
In a large system like the United States Air Force, finding suitable candidates for some of the most high speed positions can be an intense balancing act. Join us this month as Dr. Ethan Bannar sits down with Lt Col Emily Grieser, an Air Force Assessment & Selection psychologist, to discuss the ins and outs of her experience providing this critical service, the training experiences that prepared her for success, and potential future directions for this field. If you are interested in the process to become an A&S psychologist or just want to learn more about how these decisions get made, be sure to tune in to this month’s episode!Lt Col Grieser can be reached at emily.grieser.1@us.af.mil Want to get connected with our team or guests? Have feedback, suggestions, or recommendations? Send us an email at milpsychpodcast@gmail.com
In a world where suicide in our Armed Forces continues to persist, how we respond to this ever-evolving crisis is imperative. In this episode, Dr. Jinkerson sits down with Lt Col (Dr.) Chris Button and Dr. Ian Stanley, two of the nation's experts in assessing and preventing suicide. Lt Col Button is currently serving as the Suicide Prevention Program Manager for the Department of the Air Force, while Dr. Stanley currently works as the Psychological Health Lead at the Colorado University Center for Combat Research, both of them focus on preventing suicide in Service Members. From research on factors leading to suicide to lethal means safety, the suicide prevention landscape continues to evolve. Want to learn more about this mission critical topic? This is the episode for you!Dr. Stanley can be reached by email at ian.stanley@cuanschutz.eduLt Col Button can be reached by email at christopher.button.2@us.af.milWant to get connected with our team or guests? Have feedback, suggestions, or recommendations? Send us an email at milpsychpodcast@gmail.com
Do you have a hard time getting patients to stick with trauma-focused treatments? Do you or your patients ever wish you could escape reality and spend some time as someone new? In this episode, Dr. Jinkerson sits down with the Military Psychology Podcast’s own Dr. Brooke Long to discuss the use of the popular tabletop role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons as a treatment modality for PTSD. Outside of her roles in editing and producing for the podcast, Dr. Long is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist, Certified Clinical Trauma Professional, and Clinical Supervisor at the Road Home Program in Chicago, IL, where she developed and runs a novel D&D psychotherapy group dubbed “Roll for Healing” (a punny wordplay on the D&D phrase “roll for initiative”) focused on treating Veterans and Active Duty suffering from PTSD and other invisible wounds of service. From exposure therapy to social skills training, cognitive defusion to emotion regulation, and even empathy building, cultural humility, and therapist improv, D&D has shown tremendous efficacy in symptom improvement and psychosocial functioning. Want to hear more about this unique form of treatment or learn more about how to start a D&D therapy group yourself? This is the episode for you!Dr. Long can be reached at our podcast email below, or by connecting to her on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/brookelongpsyd/Want to get connected with our team or guests? Have feedback, suggestions, or recommendations? Send us an email at milpsychpodcast@gmail.com
In the age of social media and technological advancement, we are seeing more and more patients requesting the newest and most “trending” treatment methods for their physical and mental health concerns. Navigating this ever-evolving landscape can be tricky, particularly when these techniques do not align with the published Clinical Practice Guidelines for evidence-based care. In this episode, Dr. Jinkerson sits down with Dr. Emily O’Hara, a Licensed Clinical Psychologist based at the Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center, the only integrated Department of Defense and Veterans Affairs treatment site in the nation, where she currently serves as the Psychology Program Manager and Section Chief overseeing outpatient PTSD programming, Primary Care Mental Health Integration, and the Community Based Outpatient Clinics in McHenry, IL, Evanston, IL, and Kenosha, WI. In this episode, we discuss the use of Complementary and Alternative Medicines within Active Duty and Veteran populations and Dr. O’Hara shares her experience with research and implementation of these complementary approaches to treatment in this unique integrated setting. Ever wondered about the difference between an FDA-approved vs. FDA-cleared treatment? Have an interest in learning more about acupuncture, acupressure, yoga, mindfulness, and/or the FreeSpira device? This is the episode for you!For additional questions or to connect with Dr. O’Hara, she can be reached at Emily.C.OHara@gmail.comWant to get connected with our team or guests? Have feedback, suggestions, or recommendations? Send us an email at milpsychpodcast@gmail.com
On this episode of the mil psych podcast, Dr. Bannar welcomes mentor, colleague, and friend Dr. Ann Hryshko-Mullen, Ph.D., ABPP-CHP, DBSM, Lt Col USAF (ret) to the show to discuss the many exciting training opportunities within Air Force Psychology! Dr. H-M serves as the director of psychology training for the US Air Force and plays a paramount role in the selection of HPSP scholarship recipients as well as AF resident training selection. If you are a graduate student and have questions about navigating the application, or are an AF psych wanting to know how our recruitment efforts are doing, you won't want to miss this episode. Dr. H-M shares her personally extensive history as an AF psych, unique opportunities during her active duty career, work training students through the internship pipeline, and current recruitment and performance within our training sites. This episode discusses the AF internship pipeline, training sites, unique programs, and fellowship opportunities. We share how to be competitive, what to expect, and explore what makes a training site the right fit for an applicant. We invite listeners to a unique opportunity to hear this vital information straight from the lead psychologist within AF psychology training. Want to get connected with our team or guests? Have feedback, suggestions, or recommendations? Send us an email at milpsychpodcast@gmail.com
Join Air Force psychologists Drs. Ethan Bannar and Jeremy Jinkerson as they talk with Lt Col (Dr.) Mikel Merritt, the Air Force Psychology Consultant. As the "Consultant," Lt Col Merritt serves as the top psychologist in the Air Force, with responsibilities including guiding the assignment selection process, mentoring military psychologists, retaining talent, and advocating for Air Force psychologists inside and outside the military. The discussion ranges from the missions of Air Force and military psychology, to the Defense Health Agency's assumption of the military's medical mission, to embedding psychologists into operational units. Manning and retention are also discussed along with the reasons one might wish to become a military psychologist. Are you considering military service as a psychologist or already serving in one of our branches? Do you want to know more about Active Duty service for your practice with military or veterans? Then you'll want to listen to this episode.
On a podcast about military psychology, you’d bet we would talk a lot about psychological trauma...and you’d be correct. But what happens when a patient’s trauma comes from within their own body rather than an external threat? What if the traumatic event was something that the patient did not see? Do we still consider a diagnosis of PTSD? Are the treatments the same? On this episode, Dr. Sacha McBain shares her expertise diagnosing and treating medical trauma, traumatic experiences from medical events. Dr. McBain serves as the Associate Director of the Center for Trauma Prevention, Recovery, and Innovation at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS). In this role, she has spearheaded implementation of screening, education, and brief intervention efforts within the Department of Surgery’s Division of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery to address the unique mental health needs of patients experiencing serious injury or acute illness. She also provides training and consultation to medical services around implementation of trauma-informed care practices, medical traumatic stress, and health care worker wellness initiatives designed to mitigate the impact of workplace trauma exposure. Her clinical interests include increasing access to care for patients, advocating for mental health resources in medical settings, and destigmatizing utilization of mental health engagement for patients and their families. Join podcast host, Dr. Ethan Bannar, and guest host, Dr. Brooke Long, as they welcome Dr. McBain to the Military Psychology Podcast to delve into the complex landscape that is medical trauma, discussing and defining the experience of medical trauma, the role of psychologists in health-related settings, challenges in the field, and prevention and intervention strategies for use in clinical settings! Dr. McBain can be reached via Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sachamcbain/
Civilian mental health practitioners work more closely with active duty military service members than you might think. In fact, many military mental health provider’s rely on a civilian network of specialty mental health facilities to support service members in need of acute care. In this episode, Dr. Brooke Long shares her experience as a licensed clinical psychologist and trauma-therapy specialist working directly with Veteran and Active Duty service members on their road to recovery from Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. We explore trauma therapy, cognitive processing therapy for PTSD, Veterans Affairs MH care, and discuss The Road Home program. Dr. Long discusses her clinical role and professional opinion about patient’s engaged in trauma treatment, benefits and risks, as well as barriers to recovery in this complex area of clinical practice. As an Early Career Psychologist, she shares what she has found to be most fruitful in her practice of psychotherapy with military populations.
In this episode, we introduce our new team! We welcome Drs. Jeremy Jinkerson, Keyia Carlton, Contessa Tracy, and Brooke Long to the Military Psychology Podcast team and discuss their interests in the field. During this episode you are likely to hear our team discussing potential topics for future episodes. Themes include trauma therapy, neuropsychology, sleep disorders, health psychology, diversity, women in military leadership positions, and much, much more. Our goal is to bring together diverse topics in military and civilian settings to deliver timely and evidence-based theory, science, and clinical practice of mental health practitioners in military settings. We look forward to having you as a guest as we re-ignite this project!
In this episode, we discover the many phenomenal training opportunities within Army Psychology! Maybe you have considered pursuing the Army HPSP or you are currently serving and curious if pursuing a career-change to psychology is even possible. Spoiler alert, it absolutely is! We welcome CPT Contessa Tracy (USA) and CPT Thomas Ballas (USA) from the APA accredited internship program at Brooke Army Medical Center, Joint Base San Antonio – Fort Sam Huston. These two talented interns share their training trajectory from graduate school practicum, internship applications, and completing a highly competitive internship program. They discuss various opportunities unique to Army Psychology and what it means to serve as an embedded mental health provider. We also open a unique conversation about supervising paraprofessional staff in the behavioral health field, an important factor of practicing psychology with active duty military units. Lastly, we touch on research opportunities as an Army Research Psychologist (71F). Want to get connected with our guests or have feedback, suggestions, or recommendations? Send us an email at div19studentrep@gmail.com or reach us on Facebook (fb.com/Div19Students ) or Twitter (@div19students).
Research psychologists are the backbone of psychological science, and many listeners have been asking to hear more about conducting research and applied work within the military. Join us for another exciting episode on the Intro to Military Psychology as we discuss a popular topic: conducting research with military populations! Listen in on our talk with Dr. Kristin Saboe, former Army psychologist who shares her experience working at the pentagon, deployed as a researcher on a Mental Health Advisory Team (MHAT) and discussing her current interests in veteran employment. We host an interesting discussion about the unique ways military psychologists wear many hats from deployed locations to congressional legislature. Dr. Saboe is the recipient of the 2019 Society for Military Psychology's Early Career Psychologist Award, the 2020 Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology's Early Career Practitioner Award, and in 2019, she was selected to participate as one of 43 national leaders in the highly competitive George W. Bush Institute's Veterans Leadership Program.Want to reach Dr. Saboe or have feedback, suggestions, recommendations? Send us an email at div19studentrep@gmail.com or reach us on Facebook (fb.com/Div19Students ) or Twitter (@div19students).
Beyond the conventional roles (Therapist, Researcher, Educator, Etc.), one hat psychologists wear is that of an advocate. In this episode, we examine how military psychologists can advocate and contribute to organizational and societal change for the betterment. We discuss with Dr. Nicholas Grant, recipient of multiple accolades for his research, leadership, and contribution in his service to the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and questioning (LGBTQ) communities. Dr. Grant currently serves as a Navy psychologist and is the President-Elect of the GLMA: Health Professionals Advancing LGBTQ Equality. He has previously served alongside Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand as a Congressional Fellow with the American Psychological Association (APA) and the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Through his past and current policy and legislative work, his advocacy efforts are directed toward LGBTQ equality, particularly on health care and military policies as they pertain to transgender service members. Additionally, he is an active volunteer, expert, and leader in LGBTQ communities as well as Division 19 and Division 44, The Society for the Psychology of Sexual Orientation and Gender Diversity, of the APA, where he often lends his expertise to advocate for change. Dr. Grant shares his advocacy experience and how he applies his experience in military context to promote policy change.Want to reach Dr. Grant or have feedback, suggestions, recommendations? Send us an email at div19studentrep@gmail.com or reach us on Facebook (fb.com/Div19Students) or Twitter (@div19students).
What do COVID vaccine development and foreign language training have in common? Answer: they both involve psychological science. In this episode, we pivot to research and applied psychology, how they look in the military context and how they are used to solve "real world problems." We talk to the current and past president of Division 19, Drs. Maurice Sipos and Eric Surface, about their perspectives on the topic. Dr. Sipos is an Active Duty Army psychologist with a PhD in Experimental Psychology, with an emphasis on behavioral neuroscience. He is a Professor and the Director of Strategic Leadership Course in the Department of Command, Management, and Leadership at the US Army War College. His research focus is wide ranging, including impact of biological agents on human, behavioral health and well-being, leadership, mindfulness and moral courage. Dr. Surface is a civilian I/O psychologist who founded ALPS InsightsTM, a Raleigh-based company that provides research and consulting services for learning and development evaluation and analytics. Dr. Surface contributed to the success of US Special Operations by serving as a consultant and applied researcher, leading projects such as foreign language training effectiveness and training needs assessment studies. Drs. Sipos and Surface share with us their personal and professional experiences as military psychologists, how they became military psychologists, and their thoughts and recommendations to students interested in being a research/applied military psychologist.Want to reach Drs. Sipos and Surface? Have feedback, suggestions, recommendations? Send us an email at div19studentrep@gmail.com or reach us on Facebook (fb.com/Div19Students ) or Twitter (@div19students).
Intro to Military Psychology: Becoming an Active Duty Psychologist with CAPT John Ralph (Ret.), USNYou might be curious about military psychology as a career. You might also be wondering, how does one become a military psychologist? Many students are unsure where to start! If this resonates with you, this is just the episode you need to hear! In this episode, we collaborate with retired Navy psychologist and the National Director of Navy Psychology Training Programs CAPT (Ret.) Dr. John Ralph. We discuss the different training pathways to becoming a military psychologist in all service branches. Dr. Ralph also shares his journey into military psychology as well as a glimpse of his extensive experience as a military psychologist, such as being the first ship psychologist aboard USS John F. Kennedy (CV-67) to leading the midshipmen development center at US Naval Academy to becoming the training director of Navy psychology.Want to reach Dr. Ralph or have feedback, suggestions, recommendations? Send us an email at div19studentrep@gmail.com or reach us on Facebook (fb.com/Div19Students ) or Twitter (@div19students).
Are you curious what it is like serving as a military psychologist in operational settings? Wondering what is life like as an active duty psychologist? In our inaugural episode, we learn just that from retired (Col) Dr. Mark Staal. Dr. Staal has worked as licensed psychologist for 25 years, serving 20+ years as an active-duty military psychologist with the US Air Force and is an expert in the field of operational psychological, ethics, and the psychological science pertaining to national security. He is an esteemed authored to multiple articles, chapters and books on these topics and he continues to push the literary needle forward in these specialty areas. On this episode we discuss his career and experience as a military psychologist, from being a NASA Aerospace Psychology Fellow to a senior Air Force operational psychologist across the world. Join us for an exciting review of what it’s like to serve as a military psychologist in active duty settings. Dr. Staal shares multiple tips for anyone considering this as a potential career path!He most recently co-authored a book “Operational Psychology: A New Field to Support National Security and Public Safety,” which digs deep into the ethical issues surrounding the work of operational military psychology practitioners. Dr. Staal is an avid participant in Division 19, the Society for Military Psychology and is currently operating his own consulting firm - http://www.ossconsultation.com/index.html Want to reach Dr. Staal or have feedback, suggestions, recommendations? Send us an email at div19studentrep@gmail.com or reach us on Facebook (fb.com/Div19Students ) or Twitter (@div19students).
Welcome to our new Series, Introduction to Military Psychology! Subscribe to the Military Psychology Podcast Network feed for free access, and follow the Society for Military Psychology at www.militarypsych.org and on social media at @APADIV19. Div19studentrep@gmail.com is a good way to get in touch with us.




