Participants will be given an opportunity to learn about the concept of Moral Injury and the ways in which it can impact service members and their families. In addition, the presenter will assist participants in learning ways in which service professionals and family members can assist those who have been impacted by Moral Injury.
Using Grammatical Signals Suitable to Patterns of Idea Development
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1. FD SMS icons
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https://learn.extension.org/events/2653
This material is based upon work supported by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the Office of Family
Readiness Policy, U.S. Department of Defense under Award Numbers 2014-48770-22587 and 2015-48770-24368.
VLE 4: Exploring the Impact of Moral Injury on
Military Families
2. Connecting military family service providers
and Cooperative Extension professionals to research
and to each other through engaging online learning opportunities
www.extension.org/militaryfamilies
MFLN Intro
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Sign up for webinar email notifications at www.extension.org/62831
3. Rev. Rita N. Brock, Ph.D
•Research Professor of Theology and Culture
and Director of the Soul Repair Center.
•As Co-Founder of the Soul Repair Center, Dr.
Brock has become an internationally
recognized expert on the emerging study of
moral injury and recovery.
•Earned her Ph.D. in philosophy of religion and
theology in 1988 from Claremont Graduate
University, becoming the first Asian American
woman in the country to earn a doctorate in
theology and the first ever to serve on the
Board of Directors of the American Academy of
Religion (AAR).
•Co-Author of Soul Repair: recovering from
Moral Injury after War (2012)
Today’s Presenters
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8. Moral Injury
•Is when deeply held beliefs and expectations about ethical conduct are transgressed and
disrupt a person’s expectations about and confidence in his or her own moral behavior or
the capacity of others to behave in a just and ethical manner
•Is not inherently fear-based; it can arise from
o killing (esp. friendly fire, vengeance killing, or enjoying killing)
o perpetration of violence
o betrayals of trust in leaders
o witnessing depraved behavior
o handling human remains, or
o failing to prevent serious unethical acts
•Can result in guilt, sorrow, shame, self-handicapping, anger, demoralization, alienation,
isolation, loss of faith or meaning, and/or despair
-- Litz, B. T. et. al.
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9. Relation of PTSD and Moral Injury
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http://projects.huffingtonpost.com/moral-injury
11. Moral Injury as Soul/Empathy Wound: Inner Anguish from
ruptured or destroyed moral foundations
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“Battling PTSD” / CC0 on Flickr
12. How Moral Injury can sound
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http://www.pri.org/stories/2011-04-21/soldier-remembers-tim-hetherington
13. How Moral Injury can sound
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“… I started thinking that God hates me…I'm not
religious or anything, but I felt like there was this
hate for me.... That's the terrible thing of war. You
do terrible things and you have to live with them
afterwards but you'd do them the same way if you
had to go back. So what do you do? It's an evil,
evil, evil thing inside your body. It's like … good
versus evil inside there ….”
Documentary film “Korengal” by Sebastian Junger Ss, reflecting on his
experience at Restrepo Camp: https://korengalthemovie.com
15. Moral Injury
Can emerge long after events or experiences
Is an aspect of every war
Creates Isolation
Can result from other traumas
Can affect many professions (medical, law enforcement, social work,
ministry)
Can emerge as secondary trauma in caregivers
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16. After War: Multiple, Overlapping Losses
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CC0 Public Domain https://pixabay.com/en/graveyard-military-cemetery-war-534616
21. Offer Times for Creative Work:
Poetry, Art, Music, Dance
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CC0 Public Domain https://pixabay.com/en/clay-hands-sculpting-art-690404/ CC0 Public Domain https://pixabay.com/en/hamburg-tango-argentino-festival-1508779/
CC0 Public Domain https://pixabay.com/en/guitarist-acoustic-guitar-man-boy-407212 CC0 Public Domain https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A_typewriter_(10995863465).jpg
22. Mask Project at Walter Reed
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http://www.nationalgeographic.com/healing-soldiers/
27. What is one significant thing
you learned today?
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28. Connect with MFLN Family Development Online!
MFLN Family Development
MFLN Family Development @MFLNFD
MFLN Family Development
To subscribe to our MFLN Family Development newsletter send an email to:
MFLNfamilydevelopment@gmail.com with the Subject: Subscribe
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29. MFLN Intro
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We invite MFLN Service Provider Partners
to our private LinkedIn Group!
https://www.linkedin.com/groups/8409844
DoD
Branch Services
Reserve
Guard
Cooperative
Extension
30. CE Credit Information
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• For this webinar, we are offering Early Intervention, NASW, and Georgia Marriage
and Family Therapy CE credits.
• Early Intervention CE credits are available to participants in Illinois, Georgia,
Kansas, Kentucky, Ohio (EISC & EI CE credit), North Carolina, Tennessee,
Texas, and Virginia.
• Webinar participants who want to receive a certificate of continuing education (or just
want proof of participation in the training) need to take this evaluation and post-
test: https://vte.co1.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_0GUh8NOOMLYmFUh
• You must submit your certificate of completion and any other materials required to
your state/agency in order to receive credit.
• CE certificates of completion will be automatically emailed to participants upon
completion of the evaluation & post-test.
o Questions/concerns regarding EI CE credit certificates?
• Contact MFLNFDEarlyIntervention@gmail.com
o Questions/concerns regarding NASW CE credit certificates
• Contact MFLNFamilyDevelopment@gmail.com
31. MFLN Family Development
Upcoming Event
Project In Sight: The Joys and
Challenges of Reintegration after
Deployment
• Date: October 27, 2016
• Time: 12:00PM Eastern
• Location: https://learn.extension.org/events/2719
For more information on MFLN Family Development go to:
https://blogs.extension.org/militaryfamilies/family-development
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32. www.extension.org/62581
32This material is based upon work supported by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the Office of Family
Readiness Policy, U.S. Department of Defense under Award Numbers 2014-48770-22587 and 2015-48770-24368.