A recent University of North Carolina study published in "The New England Journal of Medicine" confirmed what most people in Fayetteville already knew: Army wives with deployed husbands received more diagnoses of depressive disorders, sleep disorders, anxiety, acute stress reaction and adjustment disorders than women whose husbands were not deployed.
The research team went through 250,000 electronic medical records of wives whose husbands are on active duty in the Army.
They found that the longer the soldiers were deployed, the more likely their wives were to be diagnosed with a mental health condition.
And while military officials aren't surprised by the findings, they are taking them seriously, said Col. Charles Engel, an epidemiologist and associate professor of psychiatry at Uniformed Services University. >>>>>
Deployment and the Use of Mental Health Services among U.S. Army Wives
ABSTRACT
Background Military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan have involved the frequent and extended deployment of military personnel, many of whom are married. The effect of deployment on mental health in military spouses is largely unstudied.
Methods We examined electronic medical-record data for outpatient care received between 2003 and 2006 by 250,626 wives of active-duty U.S. Army soldiers. After adjustment for the sociodemographic characteristics and the mental health history of the wives, as well as the number of deployments of the personnel, we compared mental health diagnoses according to the number of months of deployment in Operation Iraqi Freedom in the Iraq-Kuwait region and Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan during the same period.
Results The deployment of spouses and the length of deployment were associated with mental health diagnoses. In adjusted analyses, as compared with wives of personnel who were not deployed, women whose husbands were deployed for 1 to 11 months received more diagnoses of depressive disorders (27.4 excess cases per 1000 women; 95% confidence interval [CI], 22.4 to 32.3), sleep disorders (11.6 excess cases per 1000; 95% CI, 8.3 to 14.8), anxiety (15.7 excess cases per 1000; 95% CI, 11.8 to 19.6), and acute stress reaction and adjustment disorders (12.0 excess cases per 1000; 95% CI, 8.6 to 15.4). Deployment for more than 11 months was associated with 39.3 excess cases of depressive disorders (95% CI, 33.2 to 45.4), 23.5 excess cases of sleep disorders (95% CI, 19.4 to 27.6), 18.7 excess cases of anxiety (95% CI, 13.9 to 23.5), and 16.4 excess cases of acute stress reaction and adjustment disorders (95% CI, 12.2 to 20.6).
Conclusions Prolonged deployment was associated with more mental health diagnoses among U.S. Army wives, and these findings may have relevance for prevention and treatment efforts. >>>>>
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Military Wives
Wives of deployed soldiers are more depressed, says study
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