The Gehr Family Center for Health Systems Science and Innovation, Keck School of Medicine, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA 90407, USA.
RAND Corporation, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
Mil Med. 2022 Jul 1;187(7-8):e846-e855. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usab310.
Military personnel must prepare for and respond to life-threatening crises on a daily basis. This lifestyle places stress on personnel, and particularly so on deployed service members who are isolated from support systems and other resources. As part of a larger systematic review on the acceptability, efficacy, and comparative effectiveness of interventions designed to prevent, identify, and manage stress reactions, we assessed posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) outcomes.
We searched the electronic databases PsycINFO, PubMed, PTSDPubs, the Defense Technical Information Center, and Cochrane Central, as well as bibliographies of existing systematic reviews, to identify English-language studies evaluating the efficacy or comparative effectiveness of stress control interventions published since 1990. Controlled trials and cohort comparisons of interventions with military, law enforcement, and first responders were included. Two independent reviewers screened literature using predetermined eligibility criteria. Researchers individually abstracted study-level information and outcome data and assessed the risk of bias of included studies; data were reviewed for accuracy by the project leader. Changes in PTSD symptom scores from baseline to post-intervention were converted to standardized mean differences for comparison across studies. Risk ratios were calculated for PTSD case rates post-deployment. When several studies that compared an intervention group with a similar control/comparator reported the same outcome category and measure type, we conducted meta-analysis. We conducted meta-regression by adding a categorical variable, representing setting (i.e., in theater) or population (military vs. law enforcement or first responders) to the meta-analysis model to assess whether this variable was associated with the outcome across studies. The quality of the body of evidence (QoE) was assessed using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach, which considers study limitations (risk of bias), directness, consistency, precision, and publication bias.
Sixteen controlled trials and 13 cohort comparisons reporting PTSD outcomes met inclusion criteria. Eight controlled trials and two cohort studies had high risk of bias, primarily due to poor, differential, or unknown response rate at follow-up. Twenty-four of the 29 studies included military personnel. Interventions included Acceptance-based Skills training, Attention Bias Modification training, stress inoculation with biofeedback, Critical Incident Stress Debriefing, group psychological debriefing, Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing for sub-clinical stress, embedding mental health providers in theater, Third Location Decompression, reintegration programs, and a 3-week post-deployment residential program for psychological resource strengthening.Meta-analyses of studies comparing a group that received a stress control intervention to a group that did not receive an intervention found no significant difference in reduction in PTSD symptom scores (moderate QoE) or PTSD case rate post-deployment (low QoE). A meta-analysis of studies comparing a specific stress control intervention to an active comparator (usually standard stress management education) found no significant effect on PTSD symptom scores (moderate QoE).
Although combat and operational stress control (COSC) interventions may play a valuable role in decreasing stress, decreasing absenteeism, and enabling return to duty, a systematic review of 29 studies that included a control/comparison group found little evidence that COSC is effective in preventing PTSD or decreasing PTSD symptom scores in military personnel.
军人必须每天准备并应对危及生命的危机。这种生活方式给人员带来压力,尤其是部署的服务人员,他们与支持系统和其他资源隔绝,压力更大。作为一项关于旨在预防、识别和管理应激反应的干预措施的可接受性、疗效和比较效果的更大系统评价的一部分,我们评估了创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的结果。
我们在电子数据库 PsycINFO、PubMed、PTSDPubs、国防技术信息中心和 Cochrane Central 中搜索了文献,以及现有的系统评价的参考书目,以确定自 1990 年以来发表的评估应激控制干预措施疗效或比较效果的英语研究。纳入了针对军事、执法和急救人员的干预措施的对照试验和队列比较。两名独立的审查员使用预定的合格标准筛选文献。研究人员单独提取研究水平的信息和结果数据,并评估纳入研究的偏倚风险;项目负责人对数据进行准确性审查。从基线到干预后的 PTSD 症状评分变化转换为标准化均数差值,以便在研究之间进行比较。部署后 PTSD 病例发生率的风险比被计算出来。当比较干预组和类似对照组的几项研究报告了相同的结局类别和测量类型时,我们进行了荟萃分析。我们通过向荟萃分析模型中添加一个分类变量(代表环境(即在战区)或人群(军事与执法或急救人员))来进行荟萃回归,以评估该变量是否与研究中的结果相关。使用推荐评估、制定和评估(GRADE)方法评估证据体的质量(QoE),该方法考虑了研究局限性(偏倚风险)、直接性、一致性、精度和发表偏倚。
符合纳入标准的 16 项对照试验和 13 项队列比较报告了 PTSD 结果。八项对照试验和两项队列研究存在高偏倚风险,主要是由于随访时不良、差异或未知的反应率。29 项研究中有 24 项包括军人。干预措施包括接受技能培训、注意偏差修正训练、生物反馈应激接种、关键事件应激简报、小组心理简报、眼动脱敏再加工治疗亚临床应激、在战区嵌入心理健康提供者、第三位置减压、再融入计划,以及为期 3 周的部署后心理资源强化居住计划。将接受应激控制干预的组与未接受干预的组进行比较的研究的荟萃分析发现,在 PTSD 症状评分的减少(中等 QoE)或部署后 PTSD 病例率(低 QoE)方面没有显著差异。将特定应激控制干预与积极对照(通常是标准应激管理教育)进行比较的研究的荟萃分析发现,在 PTSD 症状评分方面没有显著效果(中等 QoE)。
尽管战斗和作战应激控制(COSC)干预措施可能在减轻压力、减少缺勤和使人员重返工作岗位方面发挥了有价值的作用,但对包括对照组的 29 项研究的系统评价发现,COSC 在预防 PTSD 或降低军事人员 PTSD 症状评分方面几乎没有证据表明其有效。