Major Depression In The Canadian Armed Forces: A Study of Incidence and Mental Health Service Use

Major depression is prevalent and impactful in military populations, and not all depressed military personnel access mental health services. However, the rate at which military personnel become depressed, and the likelihood that they will subsequently seek care, remains poorly understood. In this th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thériault, François
Other Authors: Colman, Ian
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40547
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-24778
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-405472020-05-27T03:29:28Z Major Depression In The Canadian Armed Forces: A Study of Incidence and Mental Health Service Use Thériault, François Colman, Ian Depression Epidemiology Mental Health Military Major depression is prevalent and impactful in military populations, and not all depressed military personnel access mental health services. However, the rate at which military personnel become depressed, and the likelihood that they will subsequently seek care, remains poorly understood. In this thesis, I present four distinct studies that have helped bridge existing knowledge gaps. First, I used data from a large population-based survey to measure the proportion of depressed Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) personnel who self-reported using mental health services in the past 12 months. Second, I conducted a systematic review to compare the major depression treatment gap uncovered in the first study to the treatment gaps reported in other military organizations. Third, I used data extracted from electronic medical records to measure the rate of new major depression diagnoses in CAF personnel. Results were highly consistent with the treatment gap estimates obtained from the first study, and this helped confirm the quality of the novel electronic medical record data. Fourth, I used data extracted from CAF electronic medical records to measure the temporal association between incident major depression and spinal pain. Because electronic medical records can only identify depression in care-seeking patients, I used quantitative bias analysis methods and the treatment gap estimates obtained from the first study to mitigate the risk of misclassification bias. The results of these four studies suggest that the major depression treatment gap is smaller in the Canadian military than it is elsewhere, but that it could be further reduced with additional mental health literacy interventions. They also suggest that certain sub-groups of CAF personnel may benefit from enhanced prevention or screening efforts, including spinal pain patients and individuals newly posted to administrative cells for severely sick or injured personnel. Finally, these studies highlight the importance of using rigorous epidemiological methods in military major depression research. 2020-05-25T19:21:54Z 2020-05-25T19:21:54Z 2020-05-25 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40547 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-24778 en application/pdf Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Depression
Epidemiology
Mental Health
Military
spellingShingle Depression
Epidemiology
Mental Health
Military
Thériault, François
Major Depression In The Canadian Armed Forces: A Study of Incidence and Mental Health Service Use
description Major depression is prevalent and impactful in military populations, and not all depressed military personnel access mental health services. However, the rate at which military personnel become depressed, and the likelihood that they will subsequently seek care, remains poorly understood. In this thesis, I present four distinct studies that have helped bridge existing knowledge gaps. First, I used data from a large population-based survey to measure the proportion of depressed Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) personnel who self-reported using mental health services in the past 12 months. Second, I conducted a systematic review to compare the major depression treatment gap uncovered in the first study to the treatment gaps reported in other military organizations. Third, I used data extracted from electronic medical records to measure the rate of new major depression diagnoses in CAF personnel. Results were highly consistent with the treatment gap estimates obtained from the first study, and this helped confirm the quality of the novel electronic medical record data. Fourth, I used data extracted from CAF electronic medical records to measure the temporal association between incident major depression and spinal pain. Because electronic medical records can only identify depression in care-seeking patients, I used quantitative bias analysis methods and the treatment gap estimates obtained from the first study to mitigate the risk of misclassification bias. The results of these four studies suggest that the major depression treatment gap is smaller in the Canadian military than it is elsewhere, but that it could be further reduced with additional mental health literacy interventions. They also suggest that certain sub-groups of CAF personnel may benefit from enhanced prevention or screening efforts, including spinal pain patients and individuals newly posted to administrative cells for severely sick or injured personnel. Finally, these studies highlight the importance of using rigorous epidemiological methods in military major depression research.
author2 Colman, Ian
author_facet Colman, Ian
Thériault, François
author Thériault, François
author_sort Thériault, François
title Major Depression In The Canadian Armed Forces: A Study of Incidence and Mental Health Service Use
title_short Major Depression In The Canadian Armed Forces: A Study of Incidence and Mental Health Service Use
title_full Major Depression In The Canadian Armed Forces: A Study of Incidence and Mental Health Service Use
title_fullStr Major Depression In The Canadian Armed Forces: A Study of Incidence and Mental Health Service Use
title_full_unstemmed Major Depression In The Canadian Armed Forces: A Study of Incidence and Mental Health Service Use
title_sort major depression in the canadian armed forces: a study of incidence and mental health service use
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40547
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-24778
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