@article{ETD, school = {D.N.P.}, author = {Stuart, Sierra}, url = {http://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/8041}, title = {Caring for women veterans: improving outcomes through use of trauma informed care principles}, publisher = {Oregon Health and Science University}, abstract = {The VA Portland Health Care System serves more than 95,000 veterans every year across SW Washington and throughout Oregon (U.S. Department of Veteran?s Affairs, 2018). Of those, estimates suggest that as many as 45% of the female veteran population have been victims of military sexual trauma (Klingensmith, Tsai, Mota, Southwick, & Pietrzak, 2014). It has been well-established that trauma has profound lasting effects on morbidity and mortality for these women (Calhoun et al., 2018; Creech, & Borsari, 2014; Forman-Hoffman, Mengeling, Booth, Torner, & Sadler, 2012; Freysteinson et al., 2018; Goldberg et al., 2019; Holliday, & Monteith, 2019; Kimerling et al., 2016; Kintzle et al., 2015; Monteith, Smith, Holliday, & Pietrzak, 2018; U.S. Veterans Affairs, 2018). Implementation and use of trauma informed care principles allows for an integration of care techniques that address individual trauma, and through doing so, ensures that services are accessible and patient-centered, encouraging patient engagement and adherence (Raja, Hasnain, Hoersch, Gove-Yin, & Rajagopalan, 2015).}, number = {ETD}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.6083/6w924c32f}, recid = {8041}, address = {2020}, }