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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Standard medical sick-cell chests used in the military contain either outdated or no psychiatric medications. Yet certain psychiatric medications are either useful or essential for the field and deployment. This article discusses suitable medications for both psychiatric emergencies and for chronic treatment of depression or anxiety. Psychiatric medications to avoid in deployment are also listed. Some dosing guidelines are provided. The article ends with a proposed "psychiatric sick-call chest" to be prepared in advance of deployment.
Mil Med 1994 Oct
PMID:Psychiatric medications for deployment. 787 Mar 22

The present study examined the incidence of war-related psychological distress among Persian Gulf War veterans. A total of 591 Army, Navy, and Marine reservists were administered the Mississippi PTSD Scale, the Beck Depression Inventory, and the SCL-90R. Combat-deployed reservists showed significantly higher levels of psychological symptomatology that non-deployed reservists, generally corresponding to levels of stress exposure. No significant effects were found for race or prior combat exposure, but significant differences were found between combat-deployed male and female reservists. Despite the brevity and the outcome of the Persian Gulf War, significant symptomatology exists among this population.
Mil Med 1993 Aug
PMID:Psychological and war stress symptoms among deployed and non-deployed reservists following the Persian Gulf War. 841 72

The clinical use of sertraline for 1 year in a family practice clinic in a small Air Force hospital was reviewed. Retrospective chart review showed that 85% of patients receiving five or more prescriptions for sertraline had a diagnosis of depression; the remainder were treated for chronic pain or dysthymia. The patients in the review needed dose increases (above the recommended starting dose of 50 mg qd) in nearly 50% of the cases. Clinicians using sertraline for the treatment of affective illness in the primary care setting should be aware of the likelihood for dose increases to achieve maximal clinical benefit.
Mil Med 1996 Jul
PMID:Review of clinical use of sertraline by family practice physicians in a small Air Force hospital. 875 18

Beginning in 1990, the Department of Psychiatry. Tripler Army Medical Center developed a formal treatment program for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Between 1990 and 1996, 632 patients, the vast majority of whom suffered from combat-related PTSD, were treated. Historically, many PTSD patients were treated with benzodiazepines, often in high dosages. The risks attendant to benzodiazepine management of PTSD, coupled with poor clinical outcome, prompted the staff to explore treatment alternatives. This paper describes the role of pharmacotherapy in the management of PTSD. The medications described in this paper have other primary uses in clinical practice (e.g., hypertension, insomnia, seizure control, depression, and anxiety). Medications were selected for use based on the putative modes of action and the degree of symptom relief. The therapeutic rationale was to decrease hyperarousal and sleep disturbance to permit the patients to engage in other psychotherapeutic efforts.
Mil Med 1997 Sep
PMID:Pharmacological management of post-traumatic stress disorder: clinical summary of a five-year retrospective study, 1990-1995. 929 Feb 98

U.S. military forces are increasingly involved in a variety of multinational peacekeeping and humanitarian assistance missions. How well combat-trained units and soldiers adapt to these new roles will determine U.S. success in such operations, as well as the future health and readiness of the force. In preparing soldiers for such missions, it is critical that leaders and health care providers have a clear understanding of the nature of the stressors they are likely to encounter. This report summarizes findings from a longitudinal, descriptive case study of a U.S. Army medical unit performing a peacekeeping mission in the former Yugoslavia. The goal of the investigation was to identify key sources of stress and to delineate the effect of these stressors on the health, morale, and mental readiness of soldiers. Findings suggest a range of psychological stressors that varies somewhat across operational phases of a peacekeeping mission. Furthermore, the degree of stress experienced in various areas correlates significantly with depression, psychiatric symptoms, and low reported morale. The range of stressors is reduced and summarized in a conceptually derived model of five underlying dimensions of psychological stress salient to soldier adaptation in peacekeeping operations: isolation, ambiguity, powerlessness, boredom, and danger/threat. This model provides a useful heuristic for organizing thinking about stress in peacekeeping operations and leads to several recommendations for "countermeasures" that organizational leaders can take to maintain soldier psychological readiness during peacekeeping operations.
Mil Med 1998 Sep
PMID:Dimensions of psychological stress in peacekeeping operations. 975 82

The Department of Defense invests considerable money in recruiting and training new military recruits who are discharged for mental health reasons before completing their first enlistment, often within the first 6 months of active duty. The purpose of this study was to provide a description of 1,138 Air Force recruits referred for a mental health evaluation while in basic military training. Variables examined include dispositions, demographic features, diagnoses, mental health history, and attitude and motivation characteristics. Findings show that trainees recommended for discharge often had a history of depression, expressed a lack of motivation to continue in the military, were reporting suicidal ideation, and typically had withheld information on their mental health history during their Military Entrance Processing Station processing. The results are discussed in terms of potential strategies for reducing mental health attrition in Air Force basic military training.
Mil Med 1998 Dec
PMID:Mental health attrition from Air Force basic military training. 1468 46

The present research examined stress and health among service members deployed on a medical humanitarian assistance mission to Kazakstan. Team members were surveyed before and during their deployment. Team members underestimated how much stress they would experience in terms of isolation and inability to help the local population. Team members also used less adaptive coping mechanisms than anticipated and showed elevations in alcohol and cigarette consumption. Despite these negative experiences, reports of depression and physical symptoms did not increase during the deployment. This may have been a function of team members being personally involved in important and relevant work during the humanitarian operation.
Mil Med 1999 Apr
PMID:Stress and health during medical humanitarian assistance missions. 1022 54

Just before the onset of Operation Desert Storm, health care personnel (N = 250) onboard the USNS Comfort reported the occurrence of life events for the preceding year, including before deployment and during the Persian Gulf War. Study participants noted both total and negative life events. The mean number of negative life events during the preceding year was 1.44; a sizable proportion of participants (38%) reported no negative life events during this time. There were no differences in the mean number of total or negative life events by gender, although women checked significantly more life event items related to interpersonal factors and men noted more life events concerning financial issues. Women, nurses, the childless, and lower ranking officers noted significantly greater negative life events during predeployment than deployment. Negative life events were moderately related to anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms. Both research and policy implications are discussed.
Mil Med 1999 Oct
PMID:Life events in health care providers before and during Persian Gulf War deployment: the USNS Comfort. 1054 18

The aim of this project was to study respiration, circulation, and brain activity in pigs during and after a blast wave exposure. Ten anesthetized pigs were used. Seven were exposed to blast and three were controls. Physiological parameters of respiration and circulation as well as cortical activity were followed from 30 minutes before until 120 minutes after the real or simulated blast. There were no significant changes in heart rhythm, cardiac output, arterial oxygen or carbon dioxide tension, blood pH, or mixed venous saturation during the experiment. The blast exposure caused intestinal injuries but no lung damage. A transient flattening of the electroencephalogram was seen immediately after the blast in four experimental animals, in contrast to the unchanged baseline electroencephalogram of the control animals. This momentary depression of cortical activity accompanied by short-lasting apnea indicates a blast wave-induced effect on the brainstem or higher controlling center.
Mil Med 2000 Feb
PMID:Physiological changes in pigs exposed to a blast wave from a detonating high-explosive charge. 1070 73

A total of 675,626 active duty Army soldiers who were known to be at risk for deployment to the Persian Gulf were followed from 1980 through the Persian Gulf War. Hospitalization histories for the entire cohort and Health Risk Appraisal surveys for a subset of 374 soldiers were used to evaluate prewar distress, health, and behaviors. Deployers were less likely to have had any prewar hospitalizations or hospitalization for a condition commonly reported among Gulf War veterans or to report experiences of depression/suicidal ideation. Deployers reported greater satisfaction with life and relationships but displayed greater tendencies toward risk-taking, such as drunk driving, speeding, and failure to wear safety belts. Deployed veterans were more likely to receive hazardous duty pay and to be hospitalized for an injury than nondeployed Gulf War-era veterans. If distress is a predictor of postwar morbidity, it is likely attributable to experiences occurring during or after the war and not related to prewar exposures or health status. Postwar excess injury risk may be explained in part by a propensity for greater risk-taking, which was evident before and persisted throughout the war.
Mil Med 2000 Oct
PMID:Demographic, physical, and mental health factors associated with deployment of U.S. Army soldiers to the Persian Gulf. 1105 Aug 74


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