Meaghan Mobbs, PhD

Meaghan Mobbs, PhD

Vienna, Virginia, United States
500+ connections

About

Meaghan Mobbs, PhD, is an experienced nongovernmental and policy leader. She’s a graduate…

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Experience

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    Richmond, Virginia, United States

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    Greater New York City Area

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Education

Publications

  • Cultural Appropriation and the US Military

    Psychology Today

    Is the military uniform more than just a clothing item?

    See publication
  • Veteran Stereotypes: Are you part of the problem?

    Psychology Today

    Inaugural blog post to my new Psychology Today sponsored blog, The Debrief: Tackling modern day Veterans' challenges.

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  • Beyond War and PTSD: the crucial role of transition stress in the lives of military veterans

    Clinical Psychology Review

    Although only a relatively small minority of military veterans develop Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), mental health theory and research with military veterans has focused primarily on PTSD and its treatment. By contrast, many and by some accounts most veterans experience high levels of stress during the transition to civilian life, however transition stress has received scant attention. In this paper we attempt to address this deficit by reviewing the wider range of challenges, rewards…

    Although only a relatively small minority of military veterans develop Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), mental health theory and research with military veterans has focused primarily on PTSD and its treatment. By contrast, many and by some accounts most veterans experience high levels of stress during the transition to civilian life, however transition stress has received scant attention. In this paper we attempt to address this deficit by reviewing the wider range of challenges, rewards, successes, and failures that transitioning veterans might experience, as well as the factors that might moderate these experiences. To illuminate this argument, we briefly consider what it means to become a soldier (i.e., what is required to transition into military service) and more crucially what kind of stressors veterans might experience when they attempt to shed that identity (i.e., what is required to transition out of military service). We end by suggesting how an expanded research program on veteran transition stress might move forward.

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