Effect of Navy individual augmentee deployment/s on mental health outcomes

Since the start of the Global War on Terror, the Navy has provided individual augmentee (IA) sailors to support contingency operations in order for other Services to effectively perform their missions. This study analyzes the effects of IA deployments on the mental health outcome among Navy sailor...

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Main Author: Andres, Joey M.
Other Authors: Shen, Yu-Chu
Published: Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4285
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-42852014-11-27T16:05:11Z Effect of Navy individual augmentee deployment/s on mental health outcomes Andres, Joey M. Shen, Yu-Chu Arkes, Jeremy Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.) Since the start of the Global War on Terror, the Navy has provided individual augmentee (IA) sailors to support contingency operations in order for other Services to effectively perform their missions. This study analyzes the effects of IA deployments on the mental health outcome among Navy sailors. Data for this study came from three different sources: PERS-4G3 (Active Duty Augmentation Branch), Army Medical Surveillance Activity, and Defense Manpower Data Center. A multivariate analysis using probit models was used to estimate the effects. Analyses on the officer and enlisted models indicate that an IA deployment by itself does not appear to adversely affect mental and physiological health outcomes. However, an IA officer deployed to a hostile location substantially increases the probability of requiring a mental health referral compared to a non-IA officer who is also deployed to a hostile region. In contrast, an enlisted service member on an IA tour to a hostile location has a lower probability of an adverse mental and physiological health outcome compared to a non-IA enlisted service member who is also assigned to a hostile region. Due to the long period of manifestation of mental health problems, future study should follow up with those soldiers one year after the deployment. 2012-03-14T17:41:23Z 2012-03-14T17:41:23Z 2008-03 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4285 226967931 Approved for public release, distribution unlimited Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School
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description Since the start of the Global War on Terror, the Navy has provided individual augmentee (IA) sailors to support contingency operations in order for other Services to effectively perform their missions. This study analyzes the effects of IA deployments on the mental health outcome among Navy sailors. Data for this study came from three different sources: PERS-4G3 (Active Duty Augmentation Branch), Army Medical Surveillance Activity, and Defense Manpower Data Center. A multivariate analysis using probit models was used to estimate the effects. Analyses on the officer and enlisted models indicate that an IA deployment by itself does not appear to adversely affect mental and physiological health outcomes. However, an IA officer deployed to a hostile location substantially increases the probability of requiring a mental health referral compared to a non-IA officer who is also deployed to a hostile region. In contrast, an enlisted service member on an IA tour to a hostile location has a lower probability of an adverse mental and physiological health outcome compared to a non-IA enlisted service member who is also assigned to a hostile region. Due to the long period of manifestation of mental health problems, future study should follow up with those soldiers one year after the deployment.
author2 Shen, Yu-Chu
author_facet Shen, Yu-Chu
Andres, Joey M.
author Andres, Joey M.
spellingShingle Andres, Joey M.
Effect of Navy individual augmentee deployment/s on mental health outcomes
author_sort Andres, Joey M.
title Effect of Navy individual augmentee deployment/s on mental health outcomes
title_short Effect of Navy individual augmentee deployment/s on mental health outcomes
title_full Effect of Navy individual augmentee deployment/s on mental health outcomes
title_fullStr Effect of Navy individual augmentee deployment/s on mental health outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Navy individual augmentee deployment/s on mental health outcomes
title_sort effect of navy individual augmentee deployment/s on mental health outcomes
publisher Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4285
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