P D McAllister’s scientific contributions

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Publications (2)


The Clients' Perspective - Do military uniform and rank impact on the therapeutic relationship between military mental health clients and clinicians
  • Article

June 2010

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78 Reads

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1 Citation

Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps

M M Wilson

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P D McAllister

To measure the perception of military mental health clients of the impact of wearing military uniform on the therapeutic relationship between client and clinician and to ascertain if uniform and rank is perceived as a barrier. A brief questionnaire was distributed to Departments of Community Mental Health to be disseminated to their mental health clients to measure their responses. 282 responses from mental health clients were collected over a 30 day period regarding the impact that military uniform makes to the therapeutic relationship with the clinician. 63% (n = 178) regarded uniform as negatively influencing their relationship with the clinician, 37% (n = 104) responded that it did not. 39% (n = 111) believed rank to be a barrier, whereas 61% (n = 171) did not believe it affected the relationship. The majority of military mental health clients regard the wearing of uniform as negative to the therapeutic relationship and a significant minority have similar feelings about rank. Military mental health practitioners should consider the impact of these results on the therapeutic relationship with military patients.


Do Military Uniform and Rank Impact on the Therapeutic Relationship between Military Mental Health Clients and Clinicians?
  • Article
  • Full-text available

October 2007

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630 Reads

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2 Citations

Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps

to measure the perceptions of military staff of the impact of wearing military uniform on the therapeutic relationship with mental health clients. a brief questionnaire was distributed to all military clinicians in Departments of Community Mental Health to measure their attitudes. there was a 67.9% (n=70) response rate regarding the impact of uniform on the therapeutic relationship. 20% of responses were positive, 31% negative, 37% mixed and 12% gave no answer. there was no clear pre-existing literature on this issue. Overall, the wearing of uniform appeared to be perceived positively positive. There is a need to assess clients' points of view in future studies.

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Citations (1)


... To date the authors have found limited research investigating the mental health clients' perception on the impact of military uniform and rank on their therapeutic relationship with the clinician. In a previous paper, Wilson et al [2] reported on a survey to ascertain the opinions of military mental health staff on whether or not they thought military uniform impacted on the therapeutic relationship with mental health clients. This follow on study was aimed at highlighting the opinions of the service users, the mental health clients themselves. ...

Reference:

The Clients' Perspective - Do military uniform and rank impact on the therapeutic relationship between military mental health clients and clinicians
Do Military Uniform and Rank Impact on the Therapeutic Relationship between Military Mental Health Clients and Clinicians?

Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps