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Active Warfighter Mental Health Lower in Mid-Career

Authors :
Nikki E, Barczak-Scarboro
Wesley R, Cole
J D, DeFreese
Barbara L, Fredrickson
Adam W, Kiefer
MaryBeth, Bailar-Heath
Riley J, Burke
Stephen M, DeLellis
Shawn F, Kane
James H, Lynch
Gary E, Means
Patrick J, Depenbrock
Jason P, Mihalik
Source :
Journal of Special Operations Medicine. 22:129
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Breakaway Media, LLC, 2022.

Abstract

The present study investigated Special Operations Forces (SOF) combat Servicemember mental health at different SOF career stages in association with resilience.Fifty-eight SOF combat Service Members either entering SOF (career start; n=38) or multiple years with their SOF organization (mid-career; n=20) self-reported mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) history, resilience, subjective well-being, depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress. Poisson regression analyses were employed to test SOF career stage differences in each mental health symptom using resilience, while accounting for other pertinent military factors.There were significant interaction effects of SOF career stage and resilience on mental health symptoms. SOF career start combat Servicemembers endorsed lower depression and posttraumatic stress and higher subjective well-being with higher resilience, but these associations between resilience and mental health symptoms were not seen in SOF mid-career Servicemembers.Although preliminary, the adaptive association between resilience and mental health seemed to be blunted in combat Servicemembers having served multiple years in SOF. This information informs research to provide evaluation tools to support prophylactic performance and long-term health preservation in military populations.

Details

ISSN :
15539768
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Special Operations Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1a97fc202e3707bcdf6f5ef0972a8b15
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.55460/i6m8-ezpl