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Predictors of Risk and Resilience for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Among Ground Combat Marines: Methods of the Marine Resiliency Study
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This page was updated on May 24, 2012, to incorporate the corrections in Vol. 9
Dewleen G. Baker, MD; William P. Nash, MD; Brett T. Litz, PhD; Mark A. Geyer, PhD; Victoria B. Risbrough, PhD; Caroline M. Nievergelt, PhD; Daniel T. O’Connor, MD; Gerald E. Larson, PhD; Nicholas J. Schork, PhD; Jennifer J. Vasterling, PhD; Paul S. Hammer, MD; Jennifer A. Webb-Murphy, PhD; the MRS Team
Suggested citation for this article: Baker DG, Nash WP, Litz BT, Geyer MA, Risbrough VB, Nievergelt CM, et al. Predictors of Risk and Resilience for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Among Ground Combat Marines: Methods of the Marine Resiliency Study. [Erratum appears in Prev Chronic Dis 2012;9. http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2012/11_0134e.htm.] Prev Chronic Dis 2012;9:110134. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5888/pcd9.110134.
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Abstract
The Marine Resiliency Study (MRS) is a prospective study of factors predictive of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among approximately 2,600 Marines in 4 battalions deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan. We describe the MRS design and predeployment participant characteristics. Starting in 2008, our research team conducted structured clinical interviews on Marine bases and collected data 4 times: at predeployment and at 1 week, 3 months, and 6 months postdeployment. Integrated with these data are medical and career histories from the Career History Archival Medical and Personnel System (CHAMPS) database. The CHAMPS database showed that 7.4% of the Marines enrolled in MRS had at least 1 mental health diagnosis. Of enrolled Marines, approximately half (51.3%) had prior deployments. We found a moderate positive relationship between deployment history and PTSD prevalence in these baseline data.
Introduction
Chronic psychiatric illness such as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a major public health problem among current and former military service members, especially those who have served in combat. The prevalence of PTSD among service members and veterans varies widely, but deployment to a war zone is consistently associated with an increased risk for PTSD by a factor of 1.5 to 3.5 across war eras (1). The Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts are no exception (2,3). Additionally, blast-related brain injuries, which are frequently associated with PTSD, are common (3,4). Although suicide rates among active duty personnel have risen since these conflicts started in 2003, reasons for the increase are not fully understood and are being investigated (5). PTSD and mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) appear to be risk factors for suicidal behavior (6). The number of veterans of the current conflicts seeking care at Veterans Health Administration (VHA) facilities has increased (7). Many of these veterans have met screening or diagnostic criteria for PTSD (20%–39%), often co-occurring with depression, anxiety, substance use disorders, and chronic pain (7,8). Associated long-term personal and societal costs are high.
Evidence-based therapies for PTSD have shown only modest efficacy in targeting war trauma (9). Increasingly, military resources are being invested in preventing PTSD. However, scientific advances in understanding the etiology and natural history of PTSD needed to develop effective prevention and treatments have been hampered by reliance on retrospective, cross-sectional research (10). Several prospective investigations of military cohorts have now been initiated (2,3,11). The Marine Resiliency Study (MRS) is singular among these investigations in its combined study of operational units and its biological, psychological, and social scope.
The objective of this article is to describe the research methods used in the MRS, a unique collaboration between the Marine Corps, Navy, Veterans Affairs (VA) Health Services Research and Development (HSR&D), and academia. The description of participant characteristics before deployment combined with future longitudinal data analysis may allow researchers to identify modifiable multisystem risk and resilience factors for combat-related PTSD. The potential factors under investigation are measures of arousal, cardiovascular and physical fitness, mental health, stress reactivity, genetics, neurocognitive function, deployment stressors, and social and military support.
Methods
Study design
The MRS entails prospective longitudinal evaluations of biological, psychophysiological, psychosocial, and neurocognitive moderators and mediators of combat stress in Marines recruited from 4 infantry battalions of the 1st Marine Division stationed at Marine Corps Air-Ground Combat Center, 29 Palms, or Camp Pendleton, both in southern California. Commanders of battalions deploying at time frames acceptable to MRS were briefed on study goals, and Marines in available battalions were invited to participate. Testing began on the first of the 4 enrolling battalions in July 2008 and will continue through May 2012. The institutional review boards of the University of California San Diego, VA San Diego Research Service, and Naval Health Research Center approved the study.
The primary study hypothesis is that mental health progression and outcomes among Marines exposed to combat and operational stress, trauma, and loss will be determined by risk and resilience factors across all study domains. Data analysis and hypothesis testing will be iterative, initially testing specific hypotheses within domains, followed by integrated analysis across domains to test the primary study hypothesis. The main goal is to provide the Marine Corps with targets for future prevention interventions. A secondary goal is to enhance scientific understanding of the nature and causes of PTSD.
Data collection plan
Close collaboration with the Marine Corps and the Navy, which provides health support for the Marine Corps, enables comprehensive on-site data collection. Data sources include the following: 1) on-site assessments, described in Measures; 2) archival medical record and service data; and 3) ancillary genetic and genomic studies funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (Figure 1). The subject-specific archival data from CHAMPS are integrated with directly collected MRS data and stored in a database maintained at the VA San Diego Medical Center. When the ongoing National Institutes of Health–funded studies of genome-wide association and gene expression are completed, their results will be combined with the MRS database for analysis.
Figure 1. Data sources available to the Marine Resiliency Study. [A text description of this figure is also available.]
Study setting and participant recruitment
The MRS on-site assessment plan provides for data collection across each battalion’s 14-month deployment cycle. Marines are evaluated at 4 points relative to their deployments to either Iraq or Afghanistan: T1, approximately 1 month before a 7-month war-zone deployment; T2, 1 week postdeployment; T3, 3 months postdeployment; and T4, 6 months postdeployment. Most assessments are conducted in Marine training spaces on a Marine Corps base. Some participants are assessed at the VA San Diego Medical Center or elsewhere if they have left their military units before study completion for reasons such as relocation, discharge, or injuries during deployment. Special efforts are made to gain access to ill and injured Marines. Individual informed consent is obtained before enrollment at time T1 both for direct assessment and the use of collateral data such as military health and service records. Although the study is sponsored by Marine leadership, participation at each point is voluntary.
Outcome measures
Self-report questionnaires
Participants complete self-report questionnaires (Table 1) in classrooms or other shared spaces furnished with desks or chairs. Many measures selected for use in MRS are identical to those recommended by the federal interagency working group jointly chartered by the VHA, Department of Defense, and National Institutes of Health to recommend common data elements for operational stress research and surveillance (12). Other forms, such as demographic and family history questionnaires tailored for various points, were derived ad hoc for the study. An 18-item Cohesion Scale was created by combining items from 3 validated military social support scales. In addition, we generated a 14-item Inner Conflict Scale, which assesses self-reported acts of omission or commission that may produce inner conflict because they betray deeply held beliefs, a source of psychological injury (13). Several other self-report measures were modified slightly for use in the study, including linking the widely used PTSD Checklist, Peritraumatic Dissociative Experiences Questionnaire, and Life Events Checklist to the single worst or most distressing event identified by the subject during clinical interview. A 34-item Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ) is modified from the standard 28-item report (14).
Self-report measures analyzed for this article are Your Health and Well-Being version 2 (SF-12), a measure of functional health, and the CTQ, a measure of childhood adversity (14,15). Age-adjusted norms are available for the SF-12; low SF-12 scores may indicate a risk for PTSD (16). The CTQ is a measure of pre-enlistment stress or adversity.
Clinical interviews
We interviewed each subject in a sound-dampened private office at points T1, T3, and T4, primarily to assess PTSD symptoms. No clinical interviews were conducted at T2, immediately postdeployment, to minimize subject burden. The primary outcome variable is the Clinician-Administered PTSD scale, a gold-standard structured interview (17). Clinical evaluators also assess panic disorder using a module from the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview, and a history of TBI events using criteria established by the VHA and Department of Defense. TBI symptoms assessed include loss of consciousness (LOC), duration of unconsciousness, and altered mental state (AMS) (eg, confusion or dazed feeling or posttraumatic amnesia). To ensure interrater reliability of structured interviews, all interviewers were trained and certified before each battalion was enrolled, and interrater reliability was assessed on 5% of all interviews for each data collection, in real time with 2 certified raters: 1 rater to conduct the interview and the other rater to provide an observational interrater reliability co-rating.
Laboratory specimen collection
Autonomic and metabolic traits co-vary with PTSD pathophysiology; we chose stress system, immune and metabolic biomarkers and modulators, C-reactive protein, neuropeptide-Y, and chromogranin-A from plasma; cortisol, cotinine, and α-amylase from saliva; and catecholamines, epinephrine, and norepinephrine from urine to assess these traits (18). Blood, urine, and saliva are collected from each subject at T1, T3, and T4.
Body measurements
Height, weight, and waist circumference are measured at T1, T3, and T4, and body mass index is calculated.
Hemodynamics
Resting blood pressure and heart rate are measured 3 times, each separated by 3-minute rest periods using the noninvasive DynaPulse oscillometric brachial cuff (PulseMetric, Vista, California), which enables calculation of the hemodynamic parameters of cardiac output, vascular resistance, and vascular compliance (19,20).
Physiological reactivity
Modulation of acoustic startle reactivity and heart rate are measured with a battery of 3 tests. Before testing, each participant is screened for hearing impairment and fitted with headphones while seated in a comfortable chair facing a computer monitor. After electrode placement and verification, the participant undergoes the following startle tests: 1) assessment of startle threshold using acoustic tones, 2) test of modulation of acoustic startle response while viewing emotional images or when anticipating image presentation, and 3) test for pre-pulse inhibition and startle habituation (21). Continuous heart rate is recorded throughout testing.
Neuropsychological performance
We used a laptop computer running Automated Neuropsychological Assessment Metrics to test each participant’s performance on 2 neurocognitive tasks shown in previous work to be sensitive to deployment (22) and of theoretical relevance to stress: the Continuous Performance Test, a measure of sustained attentional vigilance, and Simple Reaction Time throughput, a measure of reaction time efficiency.
Military archives
Participants’ authorization through the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 allows access to their medical and career history data from the CHAMPS database. Information includes demographic data, medical diagnoses, clinic visits, hospitalizations, duty status, and separation date and reason. For this report, International Classification of Diseases, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) mental disorder diagnoses assessed during hospitalizations and ambulatory care were extracted for each subject for the time between enlistment and the participating battalion’s deployment date. For each participant, only the first diagnostic code was used for analysis.
Study setting and participant recruitment
Subjects were recruited from First Marine Division infantry battalions preparing to deploy from bases in southern California to either Iraq (battalions 1 and 2, 2008) or Afghanistan (battalions 3 and 4, 2009–2010). All active duty members of these operational units were eligible. There were no exclusion criteria.
Participation was offered to 2,978 battalion members, both Marines and accompanying sailors (primarily corpsmen) (Figure 2). Of these battalion members, 2,610 (87.6%) consented to participate and 368 (12.4%) declined. The final battalion is scheduled to complete remaining assessments by May 2012. Dropout rates were highest immediately after deployment (T2) and at the final, 6-month postdeployment data collection (T4). These are the points at which the greatest flux occurred in unit composition. As of January 2012, 20 enrolled participants have been killed in action or died of combat wounds.
Figure 2. Subject recruitment and retention for the Marine Resiliency Study (N = 2,610) through September 2011. [A text description of this figure is also available.]
Statistical methods
Analyses were performed in SPSS version 19 (SPSS, Inc, Chicago, Illinois) and included Pearson χ2 tests and analysis of variance for between-battalion comparisons and phi (φ) and partial eta squared (ηp2), respectively, to estimate effect sizes. CTQ values were linearly transformed for analyses. To test the effects of prior deployments on self-reported health and wellness, we controlled for the potentially confounding effects of age. All comparisons between previously deployed and never-deployed participants were age-adjusted, and group means and standard deviations (SDs) were reported, if appropriate.
Results
We report demographic, descriptive, and self-report (SF-12, CTQ, and TBI) for all Marines who completed predeployment assessments (Table 2). For all Marines enrolled in MRS battalions at predeployment, the mean (SD) physical health component (PHC) SF-12 score was 53.7 (6.16) and mental health component (MHC) SF-12 score was 50.2 (8.09).
Of the 1,562 (60.5%) Marines who reported prior head injury, 56.9% incurred at least 1 head injury with combined LOC and AMS symptoms. Small but significant variations in rates of TBI were found in LOC and AMS with deployment history; 54.1% of previously deployed Marines self-reported TBI with LOC and AMS compared with 60.4% of never-deployed Marines. Duration of unconsciousness did not vary significantly with deployment history.
Approximately half (51.3%) of Marines had at least 1 prior deployment at the time of enrollment in MRS. Previously deployed Marines accounted for 46.1% to 55.3% of each battalion; percentage differences were significant but small.
Mean (SD) PHC scores were slightly lower for previously deployed (53.27 [6.13]) compared with never-deployed Marines (54.17 [6.10]) (N = 2,514; F1 = 13.92; P < .001; ηp2 = .01). However, we found no deployment-related differences in age-adjusted MHC scores.
ICD-9-CM mental disorder diagnoses retrieved from the CHAMPS database showed that 193 (7.4%) of the 2,593 enrolled Marines had either 1 diagnosis (3.70%) or multiple (3.74%) diagnoses (Table 3). After controlling for time spent in the military before deployment, there were no significant differences in the number of mental health diagnoses per subject between previously deployed and never-deployed Marines. We did, however, find moderately significant relationships between deployment history and rates of diagnosed PTSD and diagnosed suicidal ideation. Of the 193 Marines with at least 1 ICD-9-CM diagnosis, 133 (68.9%) were previously deployed and 60 (31.1%) were never deployed. Approximately 19.6% of previously deployed Marines with an ICD-9-CM diagnosis had PTSD, compared with only 1.7% of never-deployed Marines. Conversely, only 6.0% of previously deployed Marines with an ICD-9 diagnosis were seen for suicidal ideation, compared with 21.7% of never-deployed Marines.
Discussion
MRS Marines are exclusively male and, compared with all enlisted Marines from 2008 through 2010 (Navy and Marine Corps Public Health Center data), are younger, more often unmarried, and of lower rank, similar to the demographics of war-deploying battalions (23).
As expected, scores on the SF-12 measure of functional health at predeployment are similar to population norms. Recently published studies provide evidence that low SF-12 scores and predeployment mental health diagnoses can serve as markers of vulnerability (16,24). Larson et al (24) reported that 23% of Marines seen by an in-theater mental health provider had a prior ICD-9-CM mental health diagnosis; for service members with a prior diagnosis, the highest rates of rediagnosis were for attention deficit disorder (57%) and PTSD (55%). It is therefore conceivable that MRS participants would be more likely to need in-theater treatment. The broad scope and prospective design of MRS should enable us to test this assumption and to further incorporate additional psychosocial and biological measures to better understand factors predictive of relapse and resilience.
Certain features of the enrolled sample limit its generalizability. All participants are male members of either Marine Corps or Navy (primarily health care personnel attached to Marine units), so women, civilians, and members of other services are not represented. Also, few members of the reserves and no members of the National Guard are enrolled. On the other hand, because MRS cohorts are enrolled from among Marine Corps ground combat units preparing to deploy, our results should prove generalizable to the Marine Corps, whose exposure to potentially traumatic war zone events is second only to that of the Army, as indexed by cumulative casualty rates (25). The description of participant characteristics before deployment combined with future longitudinal data analysis may allow researchers to identify modifiable multisystem risk and resilience factors for combat-related PTSD.
Acknowledgments
This study was funded by VA Health Service Research and Development project no. SDR 09-0128 and by the Marine Corps and Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. We acknowledge special assistance from members of VA Center of Excellence for Stress and Mental Health, VA San Diego Research and Fiscal Services, and the 1st Marine Division and Navy Medicine at 29 Palms and at Camp Pendleton. Acknowledged also are core MRS team members Amela Ahmetovic, Nilima Biswas, William H. Black, Mahalah R. Buell, Teresa Carper, Andrew De La Rosa, Benjamin Dickstein, Heather Ellis-Johnson, Caitlin Fernandes, Susan Fesperman, David Fink, Summer Fitzgerald, Steven Gerard, Abigail A. Goldsmith, Gali Goldwaser, Patricia Gorman, Jorge A. Gutierrez, John A. Hall, Jr, Laura Harder, Pia Heppner, Alexandra Kelada, Jennifer Lemmer, Morgan LeSuer-Mandernack, Manjula Mahata, Arame Motazedi, Elin Olsson, Ines Pandzic, Anjana H. Patel, Dhaval H. Patel, Sejal Patel, Shetal M. Patel, Taylor Perin-Kash, James O.E. Pittman, Stephanie Raducha, Brenda Thomas, Elisa Tsan, Maria Anna Valencerina, Chelsea Wallace, Kate Yurgil, Kuixing Zhang, and the many intermittent on-site MRS clinician-interviewers and data collection staff.
Author Information
Corresponding Author: Dewleen G. Baker, MD, VA Center for Stress and Mental Health (116A), VA San Diego Healthcare System, 3350 La Jolla Village Dr, San Diego, CA 92161. Telephone: 858-552-8585, ext. 2230. E-mail:dgbaker@ucsd.edu. Dr Baker is also affiliated with the University of California-San Diego, La Jolla, California.
Author Affiliations: William P. Nash, Caroline M. Nievergelt, University of California-San Diego, La Jolla, California; Brett T. Litz, Jennifer J. Vasterling, Veterans Affairs Boston Healthcare System, Boston, Massachusetts; Mark A. Geyer, Victoria B. Risbrough, Daniel T. O’Connor, University of California-San Diego, San Diego, California; Gerald E. Larson, Naval Health Research Center, San Diego, California; Nicholas J. Schork, Scripps Translational Science Institute, La Jolla, California; Paul S. Hammer, Defense Centers of Excellence for Stress and Mental Health and Traumatic Brain Injury, Arlington, Virginia; Jennifer A. Webb-Murphy, Naval Center Combat and Operational Stress Control, San Diego, California.
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Tables
Table 1. Measures Included in Self-Report Questionnaire Packets at 4 Data Collection Points for Participants in the Marine Resiliency Study
Category | Measure | T1 | T2 | T3 | T4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Personal history | Demographicsa | X | X | X | X |
Deployment historya | X | X | — | — | |
Family historya | X | — | — | — | |
Child Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ) | X | — | — | — | |
Life Events Checklist (LEC) | X | X | X | — | |
Caffeine usea | X | X | X | X | |
Tobacco usea | X | X | X | X | |
Personality, coping, and cognition | Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC)b | X | X | X | X |
Response to Stressful Experiences Scale (RSES) | X | X | X | X | |
Brief COPEb | X | X | X | X | |
Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS)b | X | X | X | X | |
Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES)b | X | — | — | X | |
Janoff-Bulman World Assumptions Scale (WAS)b,c | X | X | X | — | |
Psychiatric symptoms | PTSD Checklist (PCL)c | X | X | X | X |
Peritraumatic Dissociative Experiences Questionnaire (PDEQ)b | X | X | X | X | |
Beck Depression Inventory, Revised (BDI-II)b | X | X | X | X | |
Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI)b | X | X | X | X | |
Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT)b,c | X | X | X | X | |
Drug Abuse Screening Test (DAST)b,c | X | X | X | X | |
Health and well-being | Short-Form Health Survey, 12-item version (SF-12) | X | X | X | X |
World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule (WHO-DAS) | X | X | X | X | |
Social support | DRRI Deployment Social Supportb | X | X | X | X |
DRRI Predeployment Social Supportb | X | X | X | X | |
Cohesion Scalea | X | X | X | X | |
Interpersonal Support Evaluation List (ISEL)c | X | X | X | X | |
Deployment stressors | DRRI Combat Experiencesb | — | X | — | X |
DRRI Perceived Threatb | — | X | — | — | |
DRRI Aftermath of Battleb | — | X | — | — | |
DRRI Difficult Living and Working Environmentsb | — | X | — | — | |
DRRI Concerns About Life and Family Disruptionsb | — | X | — | — | |
Inner Conflict Scale (ICS)a | — | X | X | — | |
Health care | Health care utilizationa | — | X | X | X |
Table 2. Baseline Characteristics of Participants in the Marine Resiliency Study a
Characteristic | Battalion 1 | Battalion 2 | Battalion 3 | Battalion 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
n = 315 | n = 721 | n = 671 | n = 886 | n = 2,593 | |
Age, yb | |||||
Mean (SD) | 21.4 (3.1) | 21.9 (3.4) | 22.7 (3.5) | 22.7 (3.7) | 22.3 (3.5) |
Range | 18–42 | 18–47 | 18–47 | 18–43 | 18–47 |
Marital status, %b | |||||
Not married | 71.7 | 68.0 | 57.7 | 54.4 | 61.1 |
Married | 26.3 | 28.6 | 38.7 | 40.4 | 35.0 |
Divorced/separated | 1.9 | 3.2 | 3.6 | 4.2 | 3.5 |
Deployments, %b | |||||
Never deployed | 46.0 | 44.5 | 53.9 | 48.1 | 48.4 |
Previously deployed | 54.0 | 55.3 | 46.1 | 51.1 | 51.3 |
Rank, %b | |||||
E1-E3 | 75.9 | 75.5 | 68.9 | 58.5 | 68.0 |
E4-E9 | 21.0 | 22.6 | 27.4 | 38.4 | 29.0 |
O1-O9 | 3.2 | 1.7 | 3.1 | 2.3 | 2.4 |
Race, % | |||||
European American | 84.4 | 87.4 | 78.5 | 81.6 | 82.8 |
African American | 2.9 | 3.7 | 5.5 | 5.5 | 4.7 |
Asian | 3.5 | 2.5 | 2.4 | 2.8 | 2.7 |
American Indian | 0.6 | 1.4 | 1.6 | 1.5 | 1.4 |
Pacific Islander | 1.6 | 1.2 | 0.9 | 2.0 | 1.5 |
Mixed/other | 7.0 | 3.5 | 5.8 | 5.1 | 5.1 |
Ethnicity, % | |||||
Not Hispanic | 77.8 | 79.9 | 73.8 | 74.7 | 76.3 |
Hispanic/Latino | 22.2 | 19.7 | 25.2 | 24.7 | 23.1 |
Childhood trauma | |||||
Total score, mean (SD) | 40.8 (13.1) | 39.4 (13.4) | 38.5 (12.5) | 42.0 (14.9) | 40.3 (13.7) |
Total score, range | 25–95.5 | 25–106.5 | 25–105.3 | 25–103.3 | 25–106.5 |
Head injury, % | 67.9 | 65.7 | 58.4 | 55.1 | 60.5 |
TBI with LOC and AMSc | 54.2 | 60.5 | 54.7 | 56.4 | 56.9 |
Duration of LOC, %d | |||||
≤15 min | 63.8 | 62.6 | 60.3 | 59.0 | 61.1 |
16–30 min | 12.9 | 14.0 | 18.7 | 16.5 | 15.7 |
≥30 min | 10.3 | 14.0 | 11.2 | 10.6 | 11.8 |
Unknown | 12.9 | 9.4 | 9.8 | 13.9 | 11.4 |
SF-12 – NEMC mean, (SD) | |||||
Physical | 54.9 (5.7) | 53.5 (6.3) | 54.0 (6.0) | 53.3 (6.2) | 53.7 (6.2) |
Mental | 49.0 (8.4) | 49.3 (8.3) | 50.7 (7.6) | 50.7 (7.8) | 50.2 (8.1) |
Table 3. Mental Health Diagnoses of Marines in the Marine Resiliency Study at Predeployment (T1) Assessmenta
Diagnosis | Battalion 1 | Battalion 2 | Battalion 3 | Battalion 4 | Total | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
n (%) (n = 315) | n (%) (n = 721) | n (%) (n = 671) | n (%) (n = 886) | n (%) (N = 2,593) | |||||
Substance-related disorders | |||||||||
Alcohol | 4 (1.27) | 45 (6.24) | 28 (4.17) | 39 (4.40) | 116 (4.47) | ||||
Drug | 1 (0.32) | 11 (1.53) | 6 (0.89) | 0 | 18 (0.69) | ||||
Adjustment disorders | 6 (1.90) | 26 (3.61) | 27 (4.02) | 21 (2.37) | 80 (3.09) | ||||
Mood disorders | |||||||||
Major depression | 2 (0.63) | 7 (0.97) | 4 (0.60) | 4 (0.45) | 17 (0.66) | ||||
Bipolar disorder | 0 | 1 (0.14) | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.04) | ||||
Dysthymia | 0 | 5 (0.69) | 3 (0.45) | 4 (0.45) | 12 (0.46) | ||||
Depression, not otherwise specified | 2 (0.63) | 11 (1.53) | 7 (1.04) | 8 (0.90) | 28 (1.08) | ||||
Mood disorder, not otherwise specified | 2 (0.63) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 (0.08) | ||||
Personality disorders | 0 | 8 (1.11) | 5 (0.75) | 7 (0.79) | 20 (0.77) | ||||
Psychotic disorders | |||||||||
Schizophrenia | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Brief psychotic disorder | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Psychosis, not otherwise specified | 0 | 1 (0.14) | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.04) | ||||
Anxiety disorders | |||||||||
Panic disorder | 1 (0.32) | 5 (0.69) | 1 (0.15) | 3 (0.34) | 10 (0.39) | ||||
Generalized anxiety disorder | 1 (0.32) | 0 | 1 (0.15) | 1 (0.11) | 3 (0.12) | ||||
Obsessive-compulsive disorder | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Phobias | 0 | 1 (0.14) | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.04) | ||||
Acute stress | 0 | 3 (0.42) | 1 (0.15) | 1 (0.11) | 5 (0.19) | ||||
Posttraumatic stress disorderb | 2 (0.63) | 10 (1.39) | 8 (1.19) | 8 (0.90) | 28 (1.08) | ||||
Anxiety, not otherwise specified | 2 (0.63) | 9 (1.25) | 8 (1.19) | 9 (1.02) | 28 (1.08) | ||||
Somatoform/dissociative/factitious disorders | |||||||||
Dissociative disorder | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Factitious disorder | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Conversion disorder | 0 | 1 (0.14) | 0 | 1 (0.11) | 2 (0.08) | ||||
Somatoform disorders | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Suicidal ideation | |||||||||
Ideationc | 0 | 4 (0.55) | 5 (0.75) | 4 (0.45) | 13 (0.50) | ||||
Ideation and attempt | 1 (0.32) | 4 (0.55) | 2 (0.30) | 1 (0.11) | 8 (0.31) | ||||
Other mental disorders | |||||||||
Organic conditions | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.15) | 0 | 1 (0.04) | ||||
Eating disorder | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||||
Unspecified mental disorder | 1 (0.32) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 (0.04) | ||||
Psychological factors, physical condition | 0 | 1 (0.14) | 2 (0.30) | 0 | 3 (0.12) | ||||
Sleep disorder | 0 | 2 (0.28) | 7 (1.04) | 5 (0.56) | 14 (0.54) | ||||
All other | 2 (0.63) | 13 (1.8) | 11 (1.64) | 8 (0.90) | 34 (1.31) |
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