Longitudinal Assessment of Mental Health Problems Among Active and Reserve Component Soldiers Returning From the Iraq War
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research · U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine
Abstract
To measure the mental health needs among soldiers returning from Iraq and the association of screening with mental health care utilization. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Population-based, longitudinal descriptive study of the initial large cohort of 88 235 US soldiers returning from Iraq who completed both a Post-Deployment Health Assessment (PDHA) and a Post-Deployment Health Re-Assessment (PDHRA) with a median of 6 months between the 2 assessments. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Screening positive for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), major depression, alcohol misuse, or other mental health problems; referral and use of mental health services.
Soldiers reported more mental health concerns and were referred at significantly higher rates from the PDHRA than from the PDHA. Based on the combined screening, clinicians identified 20.3% of active and 42.4% of reserve component soldiers as requiring mental health treatment. Concerns about interpersonal conflict increased 4-fold. Soldiers frequently reported alcohol concerns, yet very few were referred to alcohol treatment. Most soldiers who used mental health services had not been referred, even though the majority accessed care within 30 days following the screening. Although soldiers were much more likely to report PTSD symptoms on the PDHRA than on the PDHA, 49% to 59% of those who had PTSD symptoms identified on the PDHA improved by the time they took the PDHRA. There was no direct relationship of referral or treatment with symptom improvement.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 96.91
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 24
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Mental health
- Psychiatry
- Referral
- Population
- Depression (economics)
- Military personnel
- Cohort
- Good health and well-being