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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Military hardiness, the context-specific adaptation of psychological hardiness, is explored as it relates to military occupational stressors. It was hypothesized that military hardiness would moderate the effects of deployment stressors on soldier health. In a survey study of 629 U.S. soldiers, deployment stressors, military hardiness, and psychological and physical health were assessed during a peacekeeping deployment. Health was measured again after deployment. Results of moderated regression analyses partially supported the hypotheses; military hardiness moderated the impact of deployment stressors on
depression
after deployment, after controlling for
depression
during deployment. Implications for training military hardiness and applications to other occupational settings are discussed.
Mil
Med 2006 Feb
PMID:Military hardiness as a buffer of psychological health on return from deployment. 1657 74
This study was performed to evaluate the use of antidepressant medications among Canadian Forces (CF) members. A retrospective chart review was undertaken at seven CF bases for members who received antidepressant medications during a 6-month period. Data were collected on doses, duration, and types of antidepressant drugs, indications for therapy, and prescriber characteristics. Indications were classified as
depression
, anxiety disorders (including post-traumatic stress disorder [PTSD]), or nonpsychiatric conditions. A total of 1,024 charts were reviewed. Antidepressant usage rates were similar across sites for
depression
and anxiety but differed for PTSD. Rates of PTSD demonstrated more variability than did rates of
depression
or anxiety disorders among CF members. Antidepressant therapy is also frequently prescribed for nonpsychiatric disorders. Indications for the use of antidepressants thus varied among CF members at different bases. Better detection and treatment of
depression
may be required in this population.
Mil
Med 2006 Feb
PMID:Antidepressant usage in the Canadian Forces. 1657 77
This study evaluated changes in
depression
, anxiety, and stress during Army basic training. During week 1 of training, 139 soldiers from two companies volunteered for participation. In week 8, 93 soldiers were available for retesting. Self-reports of depressive symptoms and perceptions of stressfulness at both assessments fell within the normative range for nonclinical samples, whereas endorsement of anxiety symptoms remained slightly elevated, in the mild range. Women endorsed higher levels of anxiety (F = 8.87, p < 0.01) than did men. No gender or ethnicity differences were noted for changes in psychological distress over time. Regression analyses showed that subjects with the highest levels of initial distress on the anxiety,
depression
, and stress measures had the most change at the end of 8 weeks of training (r values between 0.61 and 0.39; all p < 0.01). Results suggest that initial levels of psychological distress are slightly elevated for anxiety but most individuals adapt to the stress of basic training, with normal levels of distress by the last week.
Mil
Med 2006 Feb
PMID:Psychological adjustment during Army basic training. 1657 88
In this study, we assessed basic, physical, and mental health needs of peacekeepers; determined barriers to mental health treatment; and examined predictors of barriers to mental health care. Active duty peacekeepers were surveyed before and after their deployment to Kosovo (n = 203) concerning their stress symptoms and attitudes about seeking mental health care after peacekeeping. Sixty-five peacekeepers were evaluated before and after their peacekeeping deployment to Bosnia. Upon returning from their mission, between 5% and 9% of Kosovo and Bosnia peacekeepers reported needing help for anger or hostility,
depression
, or deployment-related stress. The most frequently endorsed barrier was concern about the personal cost of mental health care. Among Kosovo peacekeepers, pre- and postdeployment post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms were the most robust predictors of mental health treatment barriers. Peacekeepers report a number of treatment needs and barriers that could prevent them from receiving care. The soldiers most in need of services are also those who report the most barriers to care.
Mil
Med 2006 May
PMID:Predictors of barriers to mental health treatment for Kosovo and Bosnia peacekeepers: a preliminary report. 1676 99
Unhealthy alcohol use is among the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in the United States. Among military personnel, service members between the ages 18 and 25 had a 27.3% prevalence of heavy drinking in the previous 30 days, compared to 15.3% among civilians in the same age group. In the civilian world, > 100 million patients are treated in U.S. emergency departments (ED) annually; 7.9% of these visits are alcohol related. Alcohol is associated with a broad range of health consequences that may ultimately present in the ED setting: traumatic injuries (e.g., motor vehicle crashes, intentional violence, falls); environmental injuries (e.g., frostbite); cardiovascular problems (e.g., hypertension, dilated cardiomyopathy); gastrointestinal disorders (e.g., hepatitis, pancreatitis, gastrointestinal bleeding); neurological problems (e.g., encephalopathy, alcohol withdrawal, withdrawal seizures), as well as psychological problems (e.g.,
depression
, suicide). Seminal work has been done to create behavioral interventions for at-risk drinkers. These motivational interventions have been found to be successful in encouraging clients to change their risky behaviors. We present such a technique, called the Brief Negotiated Interview as performed in a civilian ED setting, in hopes of adapting it for use in the military context. Military health care providers could easily adapt this technique to help reduce risky levels of alcohol consumption among service members, retirees, or military dependents.
Mil
Med 2006 Jun
PMID:Brief interventions to reduce harmful alcohol use among military personnel: lessons learned from the civilian experience. 1680 38
It remains to be determined whether patients with comorbid post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and
depression
use more health care resources than do those without. United Nations peacekeeping veterans from Canada were divided into four groups, i.e., PTSD alone (n = 23),
depression
alone (n = 167), comorbid PTSD and
depression
(n = 119), and neither (n = 164), and compared with respect to total number of visits to any health care professional in the past year. Analysis of variance revealed that the groups significantly differed in total visits. Post hoc analyses indicated that veterans with co-occurring PTSD and
depression
symptoms had more visits than did those in the other groups and that veterans with PTSD symptoms alone and
depression
symptoms alone had more visits than did those with neither PTSD nor
depression
. Additional analyses revealed that veterans with co-occurring PTSD and
depression
symptoms made more visits to general practitioners, specialists, pharmacists, and mental health professionals than did the others. Future research directions and implications for treatment planning are discussed.
Mil
Med 2006 Jun
PMID:Health care utilization by United Nations peacekeeping veterans with co-occurring, self-reported, post-traumatic stress disorder and depression symptoms versus those without. 1680 42
As veterans age, chronic physical and psychiatric conditions increasingly challenge the Veterans Health Administration. We examine influences of age and diagnosis on health care utilization, within the context of the 1995 deinstitutionalization policy of the Veterans Health Administration. Veterans were hospitalized repeatedly over 5 years with diagnoses of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder,
depression
, or alcohol dependence (N = 7,719). Inpatient days decreased 14% from baseline while outpatient (OP) visits increased 63%, consistent with deinstitutionalization. In adjusted models, OP utilization greatly increased with age, but psychiatric visits-notably alcohol treatment--dropped sharply. Emergency visits rose after 1997, particularly for ethnic minorities. Individuals ages 35-49 and 50-64 years were the greatest consumers of OP care; these large, aging cohorts will continue to require additional services, taxing a burdened system. Utilization patterns evolve across the life course, requiring foresight to address changing demographic demands. Careful attention to mental health utilization patterns may help policy makers and providers understand psychiatric needs in older patients.
Mil
Med 2006 Jul
PMID:Serious mental illness, aging, and utilization patterns among veterans. 1689 28
Each year, approximately 16,000 women on active duty in the U.S. military experience the birth of a child. A descriptive, longitudinal, prospective design was used to gather data with the Postpartum Depression Screening Scale.
Depression
was measured after delivery but before hospital discharge (time 1), 2 weeks after delivery (time 2), and 6 to 8 weeks after delivery (time 3). Mothers were found to be experiencing the greatest severity of symptoms in the category of sleeping and eating disturbances. Almost one-half of the mothers in this study scored either significant postpartum depressive symptoms or positive screening for postpartum depression after delivery. This number remained virtually unchanged at time 2. By time 3, 40% of women still reported depressive symptoms. At 2 weeks and 6 weeks after delivery, 13% and 11% of mothers, respectively, had positive screening for postpartum depression, consistent with the national average of 10 to 15%. Future research is needed to examine issues surrounding postpartum depression of military women.
Mil
Med 2006 Nov
PMID:Screening for postpartum depression in military women with the Postpartum Depression Screening Scale. 1715 49
The aim of this study was to compare the psychological factors between young Korean conscripts with lumbar disc herniation (LDH) and healthy controls and to evaluate the interrelationships among pain, disability, and psychological factors in LDH conscripts. The subjects consisted of 56 young conscripts with LDH and 76 controls. All subjects completed Beck's
Depression
Inventory and Spielberger's State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. To evaluate pain intensity and functional disability, the Visual Analogue Scale and the Modified Oswestry Low Back Pain Disability Questionnaire were used. LDH conscripts had more
depression
and anxiety than the controls. The functional disability of the LDH conscripts was significantly related to the four variables: pain intensity,
depression
, state anxiety, and trait anxiety. Pain intensity and state anxiety significantly contributed to the functional disability in the LDH conscripts. This study suggests that LDH conscripts have some psychological problems, such as
depression
and anxiety, in comparison to healthy controls. Furthermore, the pain intensity and state anxiety predict the functional disability in LDH conscripts.
Mil
Med 2006 Nov
PMID:Interrelationships among pain, disability, and psychological factors in young Korean conscripts with lumbar disc herniation. 1715 52
This cross-sectional study evaluated the stress levels in Italian military personnel involved in a peacekeeping (PK) mission in Afghanistan and a homogeneous group stationed in Italy (SI group). The study was performed from April 2004 to June 2004 in a sample of 160 long-time, career volunteers of the Rossi Barracks of the Alpini di L'Aquila (Italy) (SI group, n=120; PK group, n=40). A 10-item, self-evaluation questionnaire proposed in the U.N. Stress Management Booklet was administered to each volunteer. The total item score (TIS) values for the 10 items for the two groups were calculated. These values were greater for the PK group than for the SI group for all 10 items. The TIS values were grouped into three classes of symptoms, anxiety symptoms (items 1-4), stress-induced
depression
(items 5-7), and posttraumatic stress (items 8-10). The class total item score (CTIS) values were then calculated as the sum of the respective TIS values. The three CTIS values for the PK group were greater than those for the SI group. In particular, the anxiety CTIS was 72 points greater in the PK group (p < 0.001). Therefore, the peacekeepers were inclined to have a greater increase in anxiety symptoms. Consequently, antipanic techniques could be used to reduce anxiety and progressive muscular relaxation training, an important preventive relaxation technique, to face stressors and to reduce clinical anxiety.
Mil
Med 2007 Feb
PMID:Stress management and factors related to the deployment of Italian peacekeepers in Afghanistan. 1735 66
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