4.6 Article

A temporal analysis of mental health symptoms relative to separation from the military

Journal

DEPRESSION AND ANXIETY
Volume 39, Issue 4, Pages 334-343

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/da.23246

Keywords

depression; military personnel; posttraumatic; stress disorders; veterans

Funding

  1. Military Operational Medicine Research Program, U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command [6002]

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The transition from military to civilian life is often stressful for veterans. This study found that mental health symptoms fluctuate in the period leading up to and following separation from the military, with personnel with Honorable discharges showing no change in symptoms and personnel with Other than Honorable/General discharges reporting progressively greater symptoms leading to separation.
Background The transition from military to civilian life is a dramatic change that is often stressful for veterans. However, little is known regarding how mental health symptoms fluctuate in the period leading up to and following separation from the military. Methods The current study examined posttraumatic stress disorder and depression symptoms reported on surveys completed within 1 year of military separation from 23,887 active duty Millennium Cohort Study participants. A series of general linear models and graphs stratified by demographic and military characteristics examined the association between time until/since separation and mental health symptoms. Results Character of discharge had the most striking relationship between time until/since separation and mental health. Personnel with Honorable discharges did not differ in their level of mental health symptoms across the study period. In contrast, personnel with Other than Honorable/General discharges reported normal levels of mental health symptoms 1 year-prior to separation but reported progressively greater symptoms leading to separation which persisted through the remainder of study period. Conclusions This study suggests that additional outreach is needed for personnel with Other than Honorable/General discharges. However, for most other personnel, increased mental health symptomatology around military separation is not a normative phenomenon and any instance should be treated promptly.

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