The articles that are marked with an asterisk(*) indicates that the content is no longer available online.
Title | Source | Date |
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You've Got Mail! Millennium Cohort Enrolling Invited Service Members | Naval Medical Research and Development Newsletter | September 2011 |
The Millennium Cohort Study is currently enrolling invited personnel and expects to add 50,000 service members to reach a goal of over 200,000 participants by early 2012. Article is on page 8 of link
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Sleep quality worse during or post-deployment compared to pre-deployment | Combat and Operational Stress Research Quarterly | Spring 2011 |
Service members who were currently deployed or had returned from a deployment had significantly shorter adjusted sleep duration and increased adjusted odds of reporting trouble sleeping compared to those who had not deployed. Article is on page 4 of the Spring 2011 issue.
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Pre-existing psychiatric disorders predict post-deployment PTSD regardless of physical injury severity | Combat and Operational Stress Research Quarterly | Summer 2011 |
Service members with one or more mental health disorders prior to deployment were two- and-a-half times more likely to screen positive for PTSD post-deployment compared to those with no mental health disorders, after controlling for pre-deployment PTSD, physical injury severity and a host of other risk factors. Article is on page 2 of the Summer 2011 issue.
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Increased physical activity levels linked to reduced PTSD symptoms | Combat and Operational Stress Research Quarterly | Summer 2011 |
Participants who engaged in less physical activity were more likely to screen positive for PTSD. Those who reported at least 20 minutes of vigorous activity twice a week had significantly reduced odds for new-onset and persistent PTSD symptoms. Article is on page 4 of the Summer 2011 issue.
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Individual augmentees do not report increased mental health symptoms. | Combat and Operational Stress Research Quarterly | Summer 2012 |
Deployment as a Navy individual augmentee (IA) was not significantly associated with newly reported PTSD or symptoms of mental health problems (including PTSD, depression, panic or other anxiety and alcohol-related problems) compared with non-IA deployment. Article is on page 3 of the Summer 2012 issue
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PTSD symptom trajectories among deployed U.S. military personnel. | Combat and Operational Stress Research Quarterly | Summer 2012 |
Analysis of U.S. service members who had deployed either once or multiple times revealed that both groups shared very similar PTSD trajectories over time, with the vast majority (83% single deployers, 85% multiple deployers) displaying a low-stable (resilient) symptom pattern that lasted from pre-deployment to several years post-deployment. The other PTSD symptom trajectory patterns included moderate-improving (8%, 8.5%), worsening-chronic (6.7%, 4.5%), high-stable (2.2% single deployers only) and high-improving (2.2% multiple deployers only). Article is on page 5 of the Summer 2012 issue
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New-onset PTSD/depression risk in deployed healthcare professionals | Combat and Operational Stress Research Quarterly | Summer 2013 |
Military healthcare professionals have similar rates of new-onset PTSD or depression compared to those in other military occupations. Similar to other types of military personnel, combat exposure was the key factor that increased the rates of new-onset PTSD/depression in this sample, as deployed healthcare professionals with combat exposure had twice the odds of new-onset PTSD/depression compared to those deployed without combat exposure. Article is on page 3 of the Summer 2013 issue
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