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Contextual predictors of belongingness in military and veteran students on university campuses.

J Am Coll Health

January 2025

Department of Counseling, Educational Psychology, & Foundations, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Mississippi, USA.

Prior research demonstrated that military/veteran students report lower belongingness than civilian students, but the reasons why remain unclear. We investigated the impact of demographic characteristics, state and local politics, and school-specific veteran resources on reported belongingness. Participants included 104,162 students (2,814 military/veteran) who completed a survey for the Healthy Minds Study between 2014 and 2018.

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Introduction: Non-surgical management of non-neurological thoracic or lumbar spine (TL) fractures seems to provide good results in the civilian population, leading to return to work in most cases. However, data on the military population are limited, particularly regarding return to duty. This study aimed to describe a population of French military patients with traumatic non-neurological TL fractures and the outcomes of non-surgical management regarding operational capacity.

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Background: Research on older adults who sustain a traumatic brain injury (TBI) has predominantly been on civilian, nonveteran populations. Military populations experience higher rates of TBI and often experience the additive effects of TBI and other comorbid disorders, including posttraumatic stress disorder and/or substance use that may increase disability over time.

Objective: To investigate predictors of functional independence trajectories over the 5 years after TBI in veterans 55 years or older at injury.

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Deployment and combat experiences and their impact on partner substance use.

J Mil Soc Work Behav Health Serv

September 2024

Department of Community Health and Health Behavior, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how military service experiences, like deployment and combat exposure, affect the substance use of service members' civilian partners.
  • It emphasizes the importance of relationship satisfaction in mitigating the negative effects of these military experiences on partners' alcohol consumption.
  • Findings indicate that higher relationship satisfaction can reduce heavy drinking in partners, suggesting that supporting relationships could help address partner substance use linked to soldiers' service experiences.
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Introduction: Children are among the most vulnerable populations affected by armed conflicts, yet there is limited data on the preparedness of military medical personnel to care for pediatric combat trauma casualties in austere or large-scale combat operations. This study aimed to assess the confidence, training needs, and resource requirements of military medical providers who have managed pediatric patients during deployment.

Materials And Methods: This IRB-exempt, cross-sectional mixed-methods study used a survey created via a modified Delphi method with input from subject matter experts.

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