Pūtahi Hauora
Defence Health HubOvercoming Moral injuries
Overcoming Moral injuries
00:00
Translator: Reviewer: Emma Gon
00:12
Hola, Santo Domingo!
00:20
In April of 2007, during the war in Iraq,
00:25
my unit was conducting a dismounted patrol in eastern Baghdad,
00:29
when we were engaged by an enemy sniper.
00:33
The type of weapon system that they used was called a dishka,
00:37
which is normally an anti-aircraft weapon
00:40
that Hezbollah converted into a sniper rifle.
00:43
The bullet ripped through the left arm of one of my senior solders,
00:47
staff sergeant Marilyn Harper, severed his aorta,
00:51
exited out of his chest and then ricocheted into my upper right thigh
00:57
and severed my femoral artery.
01:00
I didn't know that I was shot at first but I did feel that something was wrong.
01:05
I could only hear the muted shots of the sniper rifle
01:10
and my own voice calling for a medic.
01:13
I could watch in slow motion as staff sergeant Harper's body
01:17
slowly fell to the ground.
01:19
And as I was dragging him into safety
01:22
to perform aid on him in an effort to save his life,
01:26
the slow motion time actually converted into a sense of fast motion time.
01:33
My medic arrived a few seconds later
01:37
and I'd like to point out that my medic that day was only 19 years old.
01:44
And this was the point in time that a 19-year-old kid had to make
01:49
a conscious choice between who he was going to try to save
01:53
and who he was going to let die.
01:56
He couldn't save both of us.
01:59
Now from an objective medical standpoint the medic made the right decision
02:04
in trying to save me,
02:05
because my injury was slightly less severe.
02:09
But it is still that 19-year-old kid that is going to have to live
02:13
with this moral weight of that injury for the rest of his life.
02:18
My men then dragged me into the vehicle
02:22
to transport me to the nearest medical aid station
02:25
in an effort to save my life.
02:28
As I was in the vehicle, I started to become very weak.
02:32
Nausea.
02:34
And it felt like I was going to pass out.
02:37
But I made it my only objective to stay conscious for the ride to that aid station
02:41
because I knew I would be in good hands with the medical team.
02:45
A few minutes later we arrived
02:47
and I was greeted by a team of eight expert medical personnel.
02:53
Every single person knew their specific job.
02:58
They were calm, cool and collective under pressure.
03:02
I was inspired by the work that they did
03:04
and it gave me an enormous sense of comfort
03:07
knowing that I was in such great hands.
03:10
But in spite of that, as I was on the operating table
03:14
I could feel myself starting to die.
03:17
In a catastrophic injury such as this, your body will actually pull blood
03:22
to the chest cavity in order to protect the vital organs.
03:26
And I could actually feel that happening.
03:29
The blood would creep up from my extremities
03:32
and as all the blood would leave, they would cramp up and become numb.
03:37
And then that blood creeping sensation moved up through my quads
03:41
and they became numb.
03:43
And when that feeling hit my stomach,
03:45
I knew the injury was getting out of control.
03:48
It felt as if I was running wind sprints around a 400 meter track
03:53
and couldn't stop.
03:55
And then when that blood creeping sensation hit my chest
03:58
I consciously knew that that was it.
04:01
I took my last breath, I said my last thought and I died.
04:07
I woke up approximately two days later in the Green Zone to learn
04:13
that I flat-lined for 15 minutes straight.
04:17
The surgical team that saved my life throughout all forms of utility
04:22
in an effort to do so.
04:24
And as a result of that I continued the medical evacuation process
04:28
back to the United States, recovered for about four months
04:33
and then volunteer to redeploy to Baghdad to finish the mission with my team.
04:39
(Applause)
04:40
Thank you.
04:48
Now a few years later in 2009, the Department of Defence in the US
04:55
was starting to take very seriously
04:57
the behavioural health challenges that our solders were facing
05:01
when they returned from combat.
05:05
Suicide rates were astronomical,
05:07
families were being ripped apart
05:09
and quality of life was being destroyed.
05:13
In an effort to combat that, the Department of Defence asked me
05:17
to use my story and go on a national speaking circuit with the objective
05:22
of reducing or eliminating stigma associated with help-seeking behaviour.
05:27
And I did that.
05:29
But it didn't take me long to realize
05:31
that our society has drastically oversimplified post traumatic stress.
05:37
That it has very little to do with seeing violence on the battlefield
05:42
and much more to do with the deeper, moral injuries
05:46
associated with traumatic experiences.
05:50
Shame, powerlessness, betrayal and guilt.
05:55
When those emotions are aloud to manifest
05:58
they can do so in a catastrophic fashion,
06:01
that has devastating consequences on your personal life, your families,
06:06
your friends and your loved ones.
06:10
The challenges faced by the behavioural health system across the world
06:14
and in the United States are enormous.
06:18
At any given time in the United States 1 in 5 adults is experiencing
06:23
some type of behavioural health condition.
06:27
And at the same time, the cost of mental health care in the United States
06:32
ranks among the top five costliest medical conditions in the country,
06:37
spending over 300 billion dollars a year in care.
06:41
And when you look internationally that number jumps in to the trillions.
06:46
But that being said, my instinct tells me
06:49
that the scope of the problem is far greater than that.
06:53
Moral injuries have the capacity to shake the very foundation of who you are.
07:00
And we as human beings tend to focus on decisions that we make in microseconds.
07:09
We tend to fault ourselves for those things.
07:13
We allow that to continue to spiral downward
07:17
and we forget about all the extenuating circumstances
07:20
that were surrounding the event
07:22
that lead to that decision.
07:24
When that seed is planted and is allowed to grow,
07:28
that idea can spiral downward very quickly
07:32
and develop into one of the most devastating
07:34
and destructive things that the human mind can endure.
07:39
Leading to an enormous sense of isolation and hopelessness.
07:45
It happened to me.
07:51
Several years ago, I found myself standing in the corner of...
07:56
(Nervously stops talking)
08:00
(Applause) (Cheers)
08:10
Several years ago, I found myself standing
08:12
in the corner of my hotel room in Washington, D.C.
08:15
not having a clue who I was anymore.
08:20
I felt completely hopeless and completely alone.
08:26
Despite being on the national speaking circuit,
08:28
despite being a national advocate on this topic,
08:32
and despite having a near clinical understanding of this subject,
08:37
I still failed to recognise the moral injuries within myself.
08:43
And during that moment in time, somehow I found the strength
08:48
to call one of my closest friends in a final act of desperation
08:53
and ask for help.
08:56
And much to my surprise even though I admittedly believed
08:59
that nobody could possibly understand the weight of what I was experiencing,
09:05
he proved me wrong.
09:07
Because a couple of minutes later during that phone call,
09:11
he resonated with me in a way I didn't think it was possible.
09:17
And he immediately connected me
09:19
with one of the best clinical providers in the country.
09:23
And this lady dropped everything that she was doing, cleared her calendar
09:28
and talked to me for four hours straight.
09:34
Now even though that experience completely turned my life around
09:39
and sent me down the path to healing, I went on from that point
09:44
feeling extremely concerned and even guilty
09:47
that many of the people that I knew, and worked with and other people,
09:52
who experienced other conditions across the country and across the world
09:57
did not have access to that level of care.
10:01
Our behavioural health system is overwhelmed.
10:04
And especially when we talk about moral injury,
10:08
identifying a moral injury and uncovering it
10:10
starts first and foremost with developing
10:14
a powerful sense of trust between the patient and the provider.
10:20
Some clinicians will strive for weeks, months or even years
10:25
to try to get to that point with the patient.
10:29
And again, when we have 1 in 5 people
10:31
who might be in need of that care
10:33
we can easily see how overwhelmed that system is
10:36
and that we can't exclusively relay on the behavioural health community
10:41
to solve this massive problem.
10:44
But I am here to tell you today that everyone of us in this room
10:47
has the capacity to change that.
10:52
Now it takes a great deal of moral courage to do so.
10:56
But if you are willing with your friends and loved ones who might be struggling
11:00
to dive deep into the emotional state that they are in,
11:04
truly and inherently understand what they are going through,
11:08
walk through the depths of hell with them,
11:12
and grab them by their hand and say, you're not alone anymore,
11:16
I am going to get you out of this,
11:18
you can have the most life-changing effect on somebody that you can possibly imagine.
11:23
Giving somebody the feeling that they are not alone anymore
11:27
is possibly the most selfless and courageous act you can give
11:30
to another human being in this lifetime.
11:35
Now, as a way to compound that effect
11:38
many comunities in the United States
11:41
have started to develop holistic, integrative retreats
11:46
that leveraged the power of group dynamics
11:48
and assets that are embedded within a local communities to help remove
11:53
the sense of hopelessness and act as a gateway to further care.
11:59
In a span of one week,
12:02
we combine the traditional therapeutic approaches
12:06
such as group, couples and individual therapies
12:10
with all of the emerging modalities:
12:13
yoga, reiki, massage, acupuncture, equine therapy, drama therapy,
12:20
dance therapy and spiritual healing exercises.
12:26
Now mind you, the people who attend this retreat
12:30
through the nature of their traumatic experiences
12:34
have seen the very worst side of humanity,
12:38
but these retreats show them the very best side.
12:42
And within a few days, we had people talking
12:46
about the depths of their experiences for the very first time in their lives
12:51
despite trying traditional therapy for years in some cases.
12:56
So I'd like to leave you with one thought.
12:59
As a public speaker and being involved
13:02
in a behavioural health field for a very long time,
13:05
I have often modified and changed my viewpoint
13:09
as I continued to learn more about this subject.
13:13
But there is one central truth that has never changed for me
13:18
and that I truly believe never will.
13:21
And that is, that the only force of nature,
13:25
powerful enough to overcome the moral injuries
13:29
that are inherent to traumatic experiences
13:32
is the strong sense of community and human connection.
13:35
Thank you.
13:37
(Applause)
Translator: Reviewer: Emma Gon
00:12
Hola, Santo Domingo!
00:20
In April of 2007, during the war in Iraq,
00:25
my unit was conducting a dismounted patrol in eastern Baghdad,
00:29
when we were engaged by an enemy sniper.
00:33
The type of weapon system that they used was called a dishka,
00:37
which is normally an anti-aircraft weapon
00:40
that Hezbollah converted into a sniper rifle.
00:43
The bullet ripped through the left arm of one of my senior solders,
00:47
staff sergeant Marilyn Harper, severed his aorta,
00:51
exited out of his chest and then ricocheted into my upper right thigh
00:57
and severed my femoral artery.
01:00
I didn't know that I was shot at first but I did feel that something was wrong.
01:05
I could only hear the muted shots of the sniper rifle
01:10
and my own voice calling for a medic.
01:13
I could watch in slow motion as staff sergeant Harper's body
01:17
slowly fell to the ground.
01:19
And as I was dragging him into safety
01:22
to perform aid on him in an effort to save his life,
01:26
the slow motion time actually converted into a sense of fast motion time.
01:33
My medic arrived a few seconds later
01:37
and I'd like to point out that my medic that day was only 19 years old.
01:44
And this was the point in time that a 19-year-old kid had to make
01:49
a conscious choice between who he was going to try to save
01:53
and who he was going to let die.
01:56
He couldn't save both of us.
01:59
Now from an objective medical standpoint the medic made the right decision
02:04
in trying to save me,
02:05
because my injury was slightly less severe.
02:09
But it is still that 19-year-old kid that is going to have to live
02:13
with this moral weight of that injury for the rest of his life.
02:18
My men then dragged me into the vehicle
02:22
to transport me to the nearest medical aid station
02:25
in an effort to save my life.
02:28
As I was in the vehicle, I started to become very weak.
02:32
Nausea.
02:34
And it felt like I was going to pass out.
02:37
But I made it my only objective to stay conscious for the ride to that aid station
02:41
because I knew I would be in good hands with the medical team.
02:45
A few minutes later we arrived
02:47
and I was greeted by a team of eight expert medical personnel.
02:53
Every single person knew their specific job.
02:58
They were calm, cool and collective under pressure.
03:02
I was inspired by the work that they did
03:04
and it gave me an enormous sense of comfort
03:07
knowing that I was in such great hands.
03:10
But in spite of that, as I was on the operating table
03:14
I could feel myself starting to die.
03:17
In a catastrophic injury such as this, your body will actually pull blood
03:22
to the chest cavity in order to protect the vital organs.
03:26
And I could actually feel that happening.
03:29
The blood would creep up from my extremities
03:32
and as all the blood would leave, they would cramp up and become numb.
03:37
And then that blood creeping sensation moved up through my quads
03:41
and they became numb.
03:43
And when that feeling hit my stomach,
03:45
I knew the injury was getting out of control.
03:48
It felt as if I was running wind sprints around a 400 meter track
03:53
and couldn't stop.
03:55
And then when that blood creeping sensation hit my chest
03:58
I consciously knew that that was it.
04:01
I took my last breath, I said my last thought and I died.
04:07
I woke up approximately two days later in the Green Zone to learn
04:13
that I flat-lined for 15 minutes straight.
04:17
The surgical team that saved my life throughout all forms of utility
04:22
in an effort to do so.
04:24
And as a result of that I continued the medical evacuation process
04:28
back to the United States, recovered for about four months
04:33
and then volunteer to redeploy to Baghdad to finish the mission with my team.
04:39
(Applause)
04:40
Thank you.
04:48
Now a few years later in 2009, the Department of Defence in the US
04:55
was starting to take very seriously
04:57
the behavioural health challenges that our solders were facing
05:01
when they returned from combat.
05:05
Suicide rates were astronomical,
05:07
families were being ripped apart
05:09
and quality of life was being destroyed.
05:13
In an effort to combat that, the Department of Defence asked me
05:17
to use my story and go on a national speaking circuit with the objective
05:22
of reducing or eliminating stigma associated with help-seeking behaviour.
05:27
And I did that.
05:29
But it didn't take me long to realize
05:31
that our society has drastically oversimplified post traumatic stress.
05:37
That it has very little to do with seeing violence on the battlefield
05:42
and much more to do with the deeper, moral injuries
05:46
associated with traumatic experiences.
05:50
Shame, powerlessness, betrayal and guilt.
05:55
When those emotions are aloud to manifest
05:58
they can do so in a catastrophic fashion,
06:01
that has devastating consequences on your personal life, your families,
06:06
your friends and your loved ones.
06:10
The challenges faced by the behavioural health system across the world
06:14
and in the United States are enormous.
06:18
At any given time in the United States 1 in 5 adults is experiencing
06:23
some type of behavioural health condition.
06:27
And at the same time, the cost of mental health care in the United States
06:32
ranks among the top five costliest medical conditions in the country,
06:37
spending over 300 billion dollars a year in care.
06:41
And when you look internationally that number jumps in to the trillions.
06:46
But that being said, my instinct tells me
06:49
that the scope of the problem is far greater than that.
06:53
Moral injuries have the capacity to shake the very foundation of who you are.
07:00
And we as human beings tend to focus on decisions that we make in microseconds.
07:09
We tend to fault ourselves for those things.
07:13
We allow that to continue to spiral downward
07:17
and we forget about all the extenuating circumstances
07:20
that were surrounding the event
07:22
that lead to that decision.
07:24
When that seed is planted and is allowed to grow,
07:28
that idea can spiral downward very quickly
07:32
and develop into one of the most devastating
07:34
and destructive things that the human mind can endure.
07:39
Leading to an enormous sense of isolation and hopelessness.
07:45
It happened to me.
07:51
Several years ago, I found myself standing in the corner of...
07:56
(Nervously stops talking)
08:00
(Applause) (Cheers)
08:10
Several years ago, I found myself standing
08:12
in the corner of my hotel room in Washington, D.C.
08:15
not having a clue who I was anymore.
08:20
I felt completely hopeless and completely alone.
08:26
Despite being on the national speaking circuit,
08:28
despite being a national advocate on this topic,
08:32
and despite having a near clinical understanding of this subject,
08:37
I still failed to recognise the moral injuries within myself.
08:43
And during that moment in time, somehow I found the strength
08:48
to call one of my closest friends in a final act of desperation
08:53
and ask for help.
08:56
And much to my surprise even though I admittedly believed
08:59
that nobody could possibly understand the weight of what I was experiencing,
09:05
he proved me wrong.
09:07
Because a couple of minutes later during that phone call,
09:11
he resonated with me in a way I didn't think it was possible.
09:17
And he immediately connected me
09:19
with one of the best clinical providers in the country.
09:23
And this lady dropped everything that she was doing, cleared her calendar
09:28
and talked to me for four hours straight.
09:34
Now even though that experience completely turned my life around
09:39
and sent me down the path to healing, I went on from that point
09:44
feeling extremely concerned and even guilty
09:47
that many of the people that I knew, and worked with and other people,
09:52
who experienced other conditions across the country and across the world
09:57
did not have access to that level of care.
10:01
Our behavioural health system is overwhelmed.
10:04
And especially when we talk about moral injury,
10:08
identifying a moral injury and uncovering it
10:10
starts first and foremost with developing
10:14
a powerful sense of trust between the patient and the provider.
10:20
Some clinicians will strive for weeks, months or even years
10:25
to try to get to that point with the patient.
10:29
And again, when we have 1 in 5 people
10:31
who might be in need of that care
10:33
we can easily see how overwhelmed that system is
10:36
and that we can't exclusively relay on the behavioural health community
10:41
to solve this massive problem.
10:44
But I am here to tell you today that everyone of us in this room
10:47
has the capacity to change that.
10:52
Now it takes a great deal of moral courage to do so.
10:56
But if you are willing with your friends and loved ones who might be struggling
11:00
to dive deep into the emotional state that they are in,
11:04
truly and inherently understand what they are going through,
11:08
walk through the depths of hell with them,
11:12
and grab them by their hand and say, you're not alone anymore,
11:16
I am going to get you out of this,
11:18
you can have the most life-changing effect on somebody that you can possibly imagine.
11:23
Giving somebody the feeling that they are not alone anymore
11:27
is possibly the most selfless and courageous act you can give
11:30
to another human being in this lifetime.
11:35
Now, as a way to compound that effect
11:38
many comunities in the United States
11:41
have started to develop holistic, integrative retreats
11:46
that leveraged the power of group dynamics
11:48
and assets that are embedded within a local communities to help remove
11:53
the sense of hopelessness and act as a gateway to further care.
11:59
In a span of one week,
12:02
we combine the traditional therapeutic approaches
12:06
such as group, couples and individual therapies
12:10
with all of the emerging modalities:
12:13
yoga, reiki, massage, acupuncture, equine therapy, drama therapy,
12:20
dance therapy and spiritual healing exercises.
12:26
Now mind you, the people who attend this retreat
12:30
through the nature of their traumatic experiences
12:34
have seen the very worst side of humanity,
12:38
but these retreats show them the very best side.
12:42
And within a few days, we had people talking
12:46
about the depths of their experiences for the very first time in their lives
12:51
despite trying traditional therapy for years in some cases.
12:56
So I'd like to leave you with one thought.
12:59
As a public speaker and being involved
13:02
in a behavioural health field for a very long time,
13:05
I have often modified and changed my viewpoint
13:09
as I continued to learn more about this subject.
13:13
But there is one central truth that has never changed for me
13:18
and that I truly believe never will.
13:21
And that is, that the only force of nature,
13:25
powerful enough to overcome the moral injuries
13:29
that are inherent to traumatic experiences
13:32
is the strong sense of community and human connection.
13:35
Thank you.
13:37
(Applause)