Military Veterans Seek to Heal Battle Wounds through Occupational Therapy
Becoming an occupational therapist appealed to 海角直播 (SMU) student Alondra Ammon and recent alumnus Joshua Stoudt because both value a holistic approach to recovery from illness and injury.
Ammon and Stoudt each served in the military and explored other professions before discovering that occupational therapy (OT) offered them the opportunity to connect with patients on an emotional as well as a physical level.
鈥淭his is the field I was meant to be in all my life,鈥 said Ammon, pictured at right . 鈥淚鈥檓 helping people be able to function to the best of their ability so they can live to their fullest potential.鈥
Both veterans say they would like to someday use their OT skills to help veterans recover from amputations, traumatic brain injuries and .
Occupational therapy by using music, physical exercise and work to improve a patient鈥檚 ability to perform activities of daily living. After World War I, occupational therapists were called on treat the physical injuries that soldiers sustained in battle.
鈥淥ccupational therapy is much more than physical rehabilitation,鈥 Stoudt said. 鈥淚t also takes into account a patient鈥檚 emotional and spiritual needs and find activities that are meaningful to patients so they鈥檙e able to recover from adversity.鈥
In March, Ammon and Stoudt were two of more than 30 military veterans currently studying at SMU across all programs, with more expected to enroll later this year.
Growing up as one of eight children of a single mother who worked three jobs, Ammon said college didn鈥檛 seem like an option so she joined the Air Force when she was 18. She worked as a dental assistant on a base in North Dakota that prepared soldiers for deployment after 9/11.
In the years that followed her military service, Ammon trained to become a dental hygienist and a massage therapist. Giving in to her desire to travel, she later joined the ground crew of the MetLife blimp known as 鈥淪noopy One,鈥 an airship that films sporting events in Florida and Texas.
Once Ammon settled down in California, she earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in kinesiology and began the at SMU last year, also serving as a President鈥檚 Ambassador. In the future, she said she hopes to work with vets struggling with battlefield injuries.
鈥淚 think they need help, but it鈥檚 a hard thing for veterans to reach out,鈥 said Ammon, who said her sister has PTSD after deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Like Ammon, Stoudt enlisted in the military right after high school and spent two years as an Army cavalry scout.
鈥淚t gave me the self discipline I needed to get through college,鈥 said Stoudt.
After earning a master鈥檚 degree in psychology, Stoudt worked at a residential substance abuse facility and then at a regional center that serves people with developmental disabilities. He soon found that rather than connecting people to services, he wanted to become a service provider.
Stoudt, pictured at right, assessed his skills 鈥 problem solving, mental health knowledge, ability to work well with his hands, and make people feel comfortable鈥 and said they all added up to OT.
Stoudt said he wants to help veterans like his father, who served as a medic in Vietnam and continues to suffer from PTSD. He noted that the suicide rate is high among veterans and that they can benefit from OT鈥檚 holistic approach to healing the mind and body.
鈥淥T helps people engage in activities to their maximum ability,鈥 said Stoudt. 鈥淭hrough that engagement, a kind of magical thing happens which gives them a renewed sense of self-confidence that alone has the ability to heal.鈥