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确定与美国陆军受训士兵寻求心理健康护理的可能性相关的风险和复原力因素。

Identifying Risk and Resilience Factors Associated With the Likelihood of Seeking Mental Health Care Among U.S. Army Soldiers-in-Training.

机构信息

Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences, The University of Arkansas, 118 Human Environmental Sciences Building, 987 W. Maple St., Fayetteville, AR 72701.

College of Education, The University of Iowa, 361 Lindquist Center, 240 South Madison Street, Iowa City, IA 52242.

出版信息

Mil Med. 2020 Aug 14;185(7-8):e1247-e1254. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usz483.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

The Department of Defense aims to maintain mission readiness of its service members. Therefore, it is important to understand factors associated with treatment seeking in order to identify areas of prevention and intervention early in a soldier's career that can promote positive functioning and increase their likelihood of seeking mental health care when necessary.

METHOD

Using a theory of planned behavior lens, this study identified potential barriers (risk) and facilitators (resilience) to treatment seeking among 24,717 soldiers-in-training who participated in the New Soldiers Study component of the "Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers" (Army STARRS). Approval for this study was granted by the University of Iowa IRB # 201706739. Hierarchal linear regression modeling and independent samples t-tests were used to examine associations between demographics and study variables, intersections of risk and resilience, and to explore differences in the likelihood of seeking help based on mental health diagnoses.

RESULTS

A four-stage hierarchical linear regression was conducted, using likelihood of help-seeking as the dependent variable, to identify the most salient factors related to help-seeking. "Step one" of the analysis revealed soldiers-in-training who identified as female, Hispanic or Other ethnicity, and married, divorced, or separated reported a greater likelihood of seeking help. "Step two" of the analysis indicated soldiers-in-training with a history of sexual trauma, experience of impaired parenting, and clinical levels of mental health symptomatology (anxiety, depression, PTSD) reported a greater likelihood of seeking help. Inversely, soldiers-in-training with a history of emotional trauma and parental absence/separation reported a lower likelihood of seeking help. "Step three" of the analysis demonstrated soldiers-in-training with a prior history of seeking help and larger social networks had a greater likelihood of seeking help. "Step four" of the analysis revealed several interactive effects between risk and resilience factors. Specifically, soldiers-in-training who reported greater depressive symptomatology in combination with prior history of treatment seeking reported a greater likelihood of help seeking, whereas soldiers-in-training who reported prior sexual trauma and PTSD in combination with large social networks reported a lower likelihood of seeking help. Finally, a greater percentage of soldiers-in-training with clinical levels of anxiety, depression, and PTSD indicated they would likely seek help in comparison to soldiers-in-training without clinical symptoms.

CONCLUSION

Findings suggest few soldiers-in-training are likely to seek help when experiencing a problem. General efforts to encourage help-seeking when needed are warranted with particular focus on subsets of soldiers-in-training (eg, men, those with a history of some adverse childhood experiences). Strengths of this study include the examination of a large sample of soldiers-in-training to identify possible leverage points for early intervention or prevention prior to entering stressful military operating environments. Limitations of this study include the examination of only one military branch and exclusion of soldiers not "in-training." Future studies could consider replicating the current study using a sample of military personnel longitudinally to track behavioral trends as well as looking at military populations outside of basic combat training.

摘要

简介

国防部旨在保持其军人的战备状态。因此,了解与治疗寻求相关的因素非常重要,以便在士兵职业生涯的早期确定预防和干预的领域,从而促进积极的功能,并增加他们在必要时寻求心理健康护理的可能性。

方法

本研究使用计划行为理论的视角,确定了 24717 名新兵参加“军人研究评估风险和复原力”(Army STARRS)中的“新兵研究”部分时治疗寻求的潜在障碍(风险)和促进因素(复原力)。这项研究的批准是由爱荷华大学 IRB#201706739 授予的。分层线性回归建模和独立样本 t 检验用于检查人口统计学和研究变量之间的关联、风险和复原力的交叉点,以及根据心理健康诊断探索寻求帮助的可能性差异。

结果

进行了四阶段分层线性回归,以寻求帮助的可能性作为因变量,以确定与寻求帮助最相关的最突出因素。分析的“第一步”表明,自认为是女性、西班牙裔或其他族裔以及已婚、离婚或分居的新兵更有可能寻求帮助。分析的“第二步”表明,有性创伤史、经历过受损的养育和临床水平心理健康症状(焦虑、抑郁、创伤后应激障碍)的新兵更有可能寻求帮助。相反,有情感创伤和父母缺席/分离史的新兵更不可能寻求帮助。分析的“第三步”表明,有寻求帮助的历史和更大社交网络的新兵更有可能寻求帮助。分析的“第四步”表明,风险和复原力因素之间存在一些交互作用。具体来说,报告抑郁症状更严重并伴有先前治疗史的新兵更有可能寻求帮助,而报告先前性创伤和 PTSD 并伴有较大社交网络的新兵更不可能寻求帮助。最后,有临床水平焦虑、抑郁和创伤后应激障碍的新兵比没有临床症状的新兵更有可能表示他们可能会寻求帮助。

结论

研究结果表明,当新兵遇到问题时,很少有人可能会寻求帮助。有必要普遍努力鼓励在需要时寻求帮助,特别是关注新兵的某些亚组(例如,男性、有一些不良童年经历的人)。这项研究的优势包括检查大量新兵样本,以确定在进入紧张的军事作战环境之前进行早期干预或预防的可能切入点。这项研究的局限性包括仅检查一个军种和排除不在“培训中”的士兵。未来的研究可以考虑使用军事人员的样本对当前研究进行复制,以跟踪行为趋势,以及研究除基本战斗训练之外的军事人群。

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