Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, KS 66027, USA.
Am J Psychiatry. 2011 Apr;168(4):378-85. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2010.10091303. Epub 2011 Jan 18.
The authors assessed the effectiveness of a systematic method of predeployment mental health screening to determine whether screening decreased negative outcomes during deployment in Iraq's combat setting.
Primary care providers performed directed mental health screenings during standard predeployment medical screening. If indicated, on-site mental health providers assessed occupational functioning with unit leaders and coordinated in-theater care for those cleared for deployment. Mental health-related clinical encounters and evacuations during the first 6 months of deployment in 2007 were compared for 10,678 soldiers from three screened combat brigades and 10,353 soldiers from three comparable unscreened combat brigades.
Of 10,678 soldiers screened, 819 (7.7%, 95% confidence interval [CI]=7.2-8.2) received further mental health evaluation; of these, 74 (9.0%, 95% CI=7.1-11.0) were not cleared to deploy and 96 (11.7%, 95% CI=9.5-13.9) were deployed with additional requirements. After 6 months, soldiers in screened brigades had significantly lower rates of clinical contacts than did those in unscreened brigades for suicidal ideation (0.4%, 95% CI=0.3-0.5, compared with 0.9%, 95% CI=0.7-1.1), for combat stress (15.7%, 95% CI=15.0-16.4, compared with 22.0%, 95% CI=21.2-22.8), and for psychiatric disorders (2.9%, 95% CI=2.6-3.2, compared with 13.2%, 95% CI=12.5-13.8), as well as lower rates of occupational impairment (0.6%, 95% CI=0.4-0.7, compared with 1.8%, 95% CI=1.5-2.1) and air evacuation for behavioral health reasons (0.1%, 95% CI=0.1-0.2, compared with 0.3%, 95% CI=0.2-0.4).
Predeployment mental health screening was associated with significant reductions in occupationally impairing mental health problems, medical evacuations from Iraq for mental health reasons, and suicidal ideation. This predeployment screening process provides a feasible system for screening soldiers and coordinating mental health support during deployment.
作者评估了一种系统的战前心理健康筛查方法的有效性,以确定筛查是否能降低伊拉克作战环境中部署期间的负面结果。
初级保健提供者在标准的战前医疗筛查期间进行定向心理健康筛查。如果需要,现场心理健康提供者会与部队领导一起评估职业功能,并协调对那些被批准部署的人员进行战区内的护理。比较了 2007 年首次部署的前 6 个月期间,来自三个筛查战斗旅的 10678 名士兵和来自三个未筛查战斗旅的 10353 名士兵的心理健康相关临床接触和疏散情况。
在接受筛查的 10678 名士兵中,有 819 名(7.7%,95%置信区间[CI]=7.2-8.2)接受了进一步的心理健康评估;其中,74 名(9.0%,95% CI=7.1-11.0)未获准部署,96 名(11.7%,95% CI=9.5-13.9)则在部署时需要额外的要求。6 个月后,与未筛查的旅相比,筛查旅的士兵在自杀意念(0.4%,95%CI=0.3-0.5,相比之下,0.9%,95%CI=0.7-1.1)、战斗应激(15.7%,95%CI=15.0-16.4,相比之下,22.0%,95%CI=21.2-22.8)和精神障碍(2.9%,95%CI=2.6-3.2,相比之下,13.2%,95%CI=12.5-13.8)方面的临床接触率显著降低,职业障碍(0.6%,95%CI=0.4-0.7,相比之下,1.8%,95%CI=1.5-2.1)和因行为健康原因而进行的空中疏散(0.1%,95%CI=0.1-0.2,相比之下,0.3%,95%CI=0.2-0.4)也有所减少。
战前心理健康筛查与职业相关的心理健康问题、因心理健康原因从伊拉克医疗疏散以及自杀意念显著减少有关。这种战前筛查过程为筛选士兵和协调部署期间的心理健康支持提供了一个可行的系统。