Individual and organisational factors contributing to the mental health and suicide risk of current and ex-serving Navy Clearance Divers

Objective Military service is inherently stressful, and a high prevalence of mental ill-health and suicide is reported among the veteran community. The current study examined the experiences of Navy Clearance Divers and factors that may be related to their mental health and suicide risk.Method Curre...

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Main Authors: Grace Claringbold, Nicky Robinson, Arlene Walker, Loch Forsyth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2025-12-01
Series:Australian Journal of Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/00049530.2025.2472821
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author Grace Claringbold
Nicky Robinson
Arlene Walker
Loch Forsyth
author_facet Grace Claringbold
Nicky Robinson
Arlene Walker
Loch Forsyth
author_sort Grace Claringbold
collection DOAJ
description Objective Military service is inherently stressful, and a high prevalence of mental ill-health and suicide is reported among the veteran community. The current study examined the experiences of Navy Clearance Divers and factors that may be related to their mental health and suicide risk.Method Current and ex-serving Australian Clearance Divers (n = 135) completed a mixed-methods survey in June 2021 on the impact of service on their mental health.Results Fifty-five per cent of participants reported suffering a mental health issue, 40% had considered suicide, and 68% were concerned about another Clearance Diver’s suicide risk. Transitioning out of active service presented practical, emotional, and social challenges. Qualitative analysis revealed four organisational factors (organisational culture, leadership, workplace support, and work environment) and five individual factors (attitudes to mental health treatment, experience of trauma, health and behaviour, emotional and social factors through transition, and experience of transition processes) that may be contributing to the poor mental health and high suicide risk.Conclusions Several systemic organisational problems may be contributing to poor mental health and wellbeing within Australian Clearance Divers, and improvements to mental health support and the transition process are required. Defence leadership is committed to enacting systematic change.
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spelling doaj-art-99e5d0fca06a41a49acb45d2e7c0e9b92025-08-20T03:05:14ZengTaylor & Francis GroupAustralian Journal of Psychology0004-95301742-95362025-12-0177110.1080/00049530.2025.2472821Individual and organisational factors contributing to the mental health and suicide risk of current and ex-serving Navy Clearance DiversGrace Claringbold0Nicky Robinson1Arlene Walker2Loch Forsyth3School of Psychology, Deakin University, Melbourne, AustraliaSchool of Psychology, Deakin University, Melbourne, AustraliaSchool of Psychology, Deakin University, Melbourne, AustraliaSchool of Psychology, Deakin University, Melbourne, AustraliaObjective Military service is inherently stressful, and a high prevalence of mental ill-health and suicide is reported among the veteran community. The current study examined the experiences of Navy Clearance Divers and factors that may be related to their mental health and suicide risk.Method Current and ex-serving Australian Clearance Divers (n = 135) completed a mixed-methods survey in June 2021 on the impact of service on their mental health.Results Fifty-five per cent of participants reported suffering a mental health issue, 40% had considered suicide, and 68% were concerned about another Clearance Diver’s suicide risk. Transitioning out of active service presented practical, emotional, and social challenges. Qualitative analysis revealed four organisational factors (organisational culture, leadership, workplace support, and work environment) and five individual factors (attitudes to mental health treatment, experience of trauma, health and behaviour, emotional and social factors through transition, and experience of transition processes) that may be contributing to the poor mental health and high suicide risk.Conclusions Several systemic organisational problems may be contributing to poor mental health and wellbeing within Australian Clearance Divers, and improvements to mental health support and the transition process are required. Defence leadership is committed to enacting systematic change.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/00049530.2025.2472821Occupational mental healthsuicideoccupational stressmilitary service
spellingShingle Grace Claringbold
Nicky Robinson
Arlene Walker
Loch Forsyth
Individual and organisational factors contributing to the mental health and suicide risk of current and ex-serving Navy Clearance Divers
Australian Journal of Psychology
Occupational mental health
suicide
occupational stress
military service
title Individual and organisational factors contributing to the mental health and suicide risk of current and ex-serving Navy Clearance Divers
title_full Individual and organisational factors contributing to the mental health and suicide risk of current and ex-serving Navy Clearance Divers
title_fullStr Individual and organisational factors contributing to the mental health and suicide risk of current and ex-serving Navy Clearance Divers
title_full_unstemmed Individual and organisational factors contributing to the mental health and suicide risk of current and ex-serving Navy Clearance Divers
title_short Individual and organisational factors contributing to the mental health and suicide risk of current and ex-serving Navy Clearance Divers
title_sort individual and organisational factors contributing to the mental health and suicide risk of current and ex serving navy clearance divers
topic Occupational mental health
suicide
occupational stress
military service
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/00049530.2025.2472821
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AT arlenewalker individualandorganisationalfactorscontributingtothementalhealthandsuicideriskofcurrentandexservingnavyclearancedivers
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