Giving a voice to military sexual trauma during sexual assault awareness month | va puget sound health care | veterans affairs

Va

Giving a voice to military sexual trauma during sexual assault awareness month | va puget sound health care | veterans affairs"


Play all audios:

Loading...

April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM)—an annual campaign aimed at increasing awareness and education about the realities of sexual assault, how often it happens, how to recognize it


and how to stop it as well as making sure Veterans who may be struggling from this understand the many available resources the VA offers to help. This year’s theme, We believe you and we


believe in you, rings particularly loud with VA Puget Sound Health Care System Psychologist and Military Sexual Trauma (MST) Coordinator, Dr. Alycia Zink, as being the most important message


the VA can send Veterans who have experienced MST. “Sexual violence is a very isolating experience and there is still a lot of victim blaming out there, such as what were you doing? What


were you wearing at the time of your assault? And all those things are further amplified in the military,” she said. “It is really important that we go out of our way to clearly say that we


believe our survivors and that our role is not to question, it’s not to prove, it’s not to investigate. Our role is really to help someone manage what the experience has done to their


lives.” The VA recognizes MST as any unwanted or threatening sexual activity—sexual comments, behaviors, pressures, coercion, assault or rape—experienced during military service. Nearly 10


percent of Veterans (more than 43 percent of women and almost three percent of men) served by VA Puget Sound report having experienced MST when asked by their VA provider; this is nearly


double the national reports of five percent of Veterans (about 2 percent of men and 33 percent of women) who have a history of MST. Because MST carries a unique set of challenges, often


providers in the community may not have received specialized training to address it or fully understand the nuances of military culture that add to the complexity. “Even if they are familiar


with treating sexual assault, they might not be familiar with some of the more unique aspects of the military sexual trauma experience,” explained Zink. Aspects about MST such as victims


who do want to report the incident but do not have the option to report to a civilian police department but instead have to report what happened to them through their chain of command—a


chain that the aggressor could very well be a part of—which is essentially their employer, or also the fear of retaliation are all complexities that do not exist in most civilian cases of


sexual assault, she explained. “Within the VA, all staff are expected to complete training on Military Sexual Trauma so that they can be informed and sensitive to the particular needs of our


Veterans who have experienced MST and we don’t have that information about community providers,” said Zink. Because the VA is the nation’s largest health care system, Veterans who are ready


to receive care for managing and recovering from MST receive evidence-based treatments in an integrated way to address their physical and mental health care needs. “There can be a broad


range of individual responses to experiencing any form of sexual violence and the responses might be depression, PTSD, or physical symptoms like headaches or gastrointestinal distress,”


described Zink. Veterans with MST experiences will be connected to VA specialist based on their individual needs. “We deliver those services in a sensitive way based on the Military Sexual


Trauma history,” she added. As an MST coordinators, Zink’s role and that of her counterpart Julia Sewell, is about outreach and education and is largely centered on advocacy to help Veterans


get connected to specialized treatments and care options available at VA Puget Sound care sites, VA Vet Centers and community partners such as or Washington State Department of Veteran’s


Affairs. Because sexual assault takes away an individual’s consent, MST Coordinators Zink and Sewell strive to make themselves as available to all Veterans who are ready to receive care or


have questions about VA care rather than reaching out to Veterans without their consent. “We really want to make sure Veterans have a voice in what they are being offered and what services


are being offered. Julia and I are here to advocate for Veterans to the best of our abilities,” Zink said. “We really take a trauma informed approach, to ensure we are not doing things that


would aggravate or revictimize an already vulnerable population. We do not want to take away their voice in a system where they’ve already had they voice not heard.” Veterans seeking


assistance with MST can contact either of VA Puget Sound’s MST coordinators directly: Julia Sewell at (206) 277-1816 or Alycia Zink at (253) 583-3568. Veterans seeking more information about


Military Sexual Trauma and eligibility for care can also visit www.mentalhealth.va.gov/MST/. VA Puget Sound provides comprehensive care to more than 150,000 Veterans across the Pacific


Northwest. As the VA’s 5th largest research program, VA Puget Sound has research in virtually every major clinical department, including: TBI and multiple blast exposures; memory improvement


and Alzheimer's Disease; PTSD and deployment health; Parkinson’s Disease; diabetes; cancer; substance abuse; lower limb prosthetics; genomics; and Health Services. Additionally, it has


seven nationally recognized Centers of Excellence (in areas from limb-loss prevention and prosthetic engineering to primary care education and substance abuse treatment). For more


information visit www.pugetsound.va.gov.


Trending News

Vital fuel-saving tips from motoring experts

Shop around: As you drive, note which filling stations are the cheapest and stop there when you’re passing. Tyre pressur...

Supervisors plead for aid in washington : budget: molina and yaroslavsky seek health care money to ease county's deficit and are joined by boxer and o

WASHINGTON — Los Angeles County officials came to the nation’s capital in desperation Wednesday to plead for hundreds of...

Beautiful underrated city has gorgeous beaches and 'no tourist price hikes'

BRITS LOOKING FOR A CITY BREAK WITH GORGEOUS BEACHES, AMAZING FOOD AND BUDGET-FRIENDLY ACCOMMODATION MAY WANT TO CHECK O...

New california law tightens gun-buying loophole exposed by poway synagogue shooting

Like the many gun safety bills that have come before it, the one just signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom stems from tragedy. In...

Edible marijuana: What we need to know

Margie Skeer does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would be...

Latests News

Giving a voice to military sexual trauma during sexual assault awareness month | va puget sound health care | veterans affairs

April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM)—an annual campaign aimed at increasing awareness and education about the ...

Man city chief sends message to fans waiting for verdict on 130 charges hearing

MANCHESTER CITY AND THE PREMIER LEAGUE ARE STILL WAITING FOR THE INDEPENDENT COMMISSION'S VERDICT ON THE 130 CHARGE...

Design doubles: red fluffy slippers

By ALEXANDRIA DALE FOR THE DAILY MAIL Published: 17:06 EDT, 8 November 2020 | Updated: 17:06 EDT, 8 November 2020 BLOWOU...

Estimation of dietary copper requirements of coho salmon oncorhynchus kisutch (walbaum, 1792), and effects on the growth performance, tissue cu conten

ABSTRACT Copper (Cu) is an essential trace mineral for the growth of most farmed fish species. Since natural water typic...

71 harvard undergraduates awarded 2025 hoopes prize for senior theses | news | the harvard crimson

When Kay M. Rollins ’25 took a nap on Thursday, she didn’t expect to wake up to texts reading “Have you heard the news?”...

Top