Priorities for psychiatric research in the U.S. Military: An epidemiological approach

Among the 1.4 million active duty U.S. military service members, 6% receive outpatient treatment for a mental disorder each year. Over 25% of these service members leave military service within 6 months, a rate that is more than two times higher than the rate following treatment for any other illnes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Military medicine 2003-03, Vol.168 (3), p.182-185
Hauptverfasser: HOGE, Charles W, MESSER, Stephen C, ENGEL, Charles C, KRAUSS, Margot, AMOROSO, Paul, RYAN, Margaret A. K, ORMAN, David T
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container_end_page 185
container_issue 3
container_start_page 182
container_title Military medicine
container_volume 168
creator HOGE, Charles W
MESSER, Stephen C
ENGEL, Charles C
KRAUSS, Margot
AMOROSO, Paul
RYAN, Margaret A. K
ORMAN, David T
description Among the 1.4 million active duty U.S. military service members, 6% receive outpatient treatment for a mental disorder each year. Over 25% of these service members leave military service within 6 months, a rate that is more than two times higher than the rate following treatment for any other illness category. There is clearly a need to define psychiatric research priorities and an unprecedented opportunity to enhance the field of psychiatric research in general using the well-characterized military population. The first priority is to better define the burden of mental disorders in terms of incidence, prevalence, severity, risk factors, and health care use. The impact of mental disorders on occupational functioning, particularly among new recruits, needs to be better characterized. Suicide research should include efforts to validate mortality data, define the normal level of rate variability, and establish surveillance for clusters. The highly structured occupational environment of the military lends itself to studies of preventive interventions designed to reduce disability or occupational attrition resulting from mental/behavioral problems.
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source MEDLINE; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Alcohol
Armed forces
Automation
Biological and medical sciences
Cohort analysis
Epidemiologic Methods
Epidemiology
Health Priorities
Health services utilization
Humans
Incidence
Medical sciences
Mental disorders
Mental Disorders - epidemiology
Mental Disorders - therapy
Military personnel
Military Personnel - psychology
Military service
Miscellaneous
Population
Prevalence
Psychiatric research
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Risk Factors
Substance abuse treatment
United States - epidemiology
title Priorities for psychiatric research in the U.S. Military: An epidemiological approach
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