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Journal Article

Citation

Rosenheck R, Stefanovics E, Rhee TG. Psychiatr. Q. 2021; 92(3): 1129-1145.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s11126-021-09882-2

PMID

33587258

Abstract

In the 1970s, following the Vietnam Conflict, the U.S. military transitioned to an All-Volunteer Force (AVF). In the 1980's military benefits increased and a zero-tolerance policy for illicit drugs was instituted. Changes in characteristics of veterans deserve study. National survey data from 2012 to 2013 compare vetderan-non-veteran differences in three age cohorts: the Vietnam cohort; the AVF (Post-Vietnam) cohort; and volunteers under the no tolerance policy (Post-Post-Vietnam). Comparisons addressed socio-demographic, behavioral, and substance use and psychiatric diagnoses. Multivariate interaction analyses between veteran status and age cohorts were used to identify significant veteran-non-veteran differences between the first and second, and second and third cohorts. Significant interactions showed that veteran-non-veteran comparisons for the Post-Vietnam cohort as compared to Vietnam cohort reveal later veterans to be relatively more likely to be black, disabled, with lower incomes, less health insurance, more homelessness, incarceration, and suicide attempts with greater substance use diagnosis. In contrast interactions show veteran-non-veteran comparisons for the Post-Post-Vietnam cohort as compared to Post-Vietnam cohort were less likely to be black, more likely to be married, retired, with incomes over $40,000, more education and private health insurance. They were less likely to have been homeless, incarcerated or to have made suicide attempts. The veteran cohort serving in the first years of the AVF showed significant socio-economic and behavioral disadvantage (e.g homelessness) compared to their predecessors while their successors, under no tolerance drug policy, showed reversal of these trends. Military recruitment and disciplinary policies significantly affect veteran economic and health status.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Male; Policy; Vietnam; Substance use; Veterans; Pharmaceutical Preparations; DSM-5; Volunteers; Male veterans; NESARC-III

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