Faculty Publications

Overview of Depression, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Alcohol Misuse among Active Duty Service Members Returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, Self-Report and Diagnosis

Document Type

Article

Keywords

alcohol abuse; ethanol; afghanistan; depressive disorders; iraq; mental health; military personnel; post-traumatic stress disorder; diagnosis; military deployment; army; navy; air force; self-report

Journal/Book/Conference Title

Military Medicine

Volume

180

Issue

4

First Page

419

Last Page

427

Abstract

Previous studies have found deployment to combat areas to be associated with an increased risk of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and alcohol abuse, but many previous studies were limited by samples that were not representative of the deployed military as a whole. This study presents an overview of these three mental health problems associated with deployment among Air Force, Army, Marine Corp, and Navy service members returning from deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan between January 2007 and March 2008. With postdeployment health data on over 50,000 service men and women, including diagnostic information, we were able to estimate prevalence of those who screened positive for risk of each disorder in self-report data at two time points, as well as prevalence of diagnoses received during health care encounters within the military health care system. The prevalence ranges of the three disorders were consistent with previous studies using similar measures, but service members in the Navy had higher rates of screening positive for all three disorders and higher prevalence of depression and PTSD diagnoses compared to the other branches. Further, PTSD risk was higher for service members returning from Afghanistan compared to Iraq, in contrast to previous findings.

Department

Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminology

Original Publication Date

4-1-2015

DOI of published version

10.7205/MILMED-D-14-00335

Share

COinS