Growth mixture modeling of post-combat aggression: Application to soldiers deployed to Iraq.

Psychiatry Res

Center for Military Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, 503 Robert Grant Avenue, Silver Spring, MD 20910, United States.

Published: December 2016

Prior research has found substantial heterogeneity in the course of key post-deployment outcomes, such as PTSD. The current paper employs growth mixture modeling to identify differential trajectories of change in the course of post-combat aggression. A Brigade Combat Team completed surveys within 72h of return from an Iraq deployment, 4 months later, and at 12 months after return. Based on model fit indices, analyses yielded four latent aggression trajectories: "low-stable", "delayed", "recovery", and "chronic". In addition, most individuals aligned with a "low-stable" trajectory indicative of minimal aggression in the first year following return from a combat deployment. A conditional model showed that lower posttraumatic stress and lower combat exposure characterized individuals aligned with the "low-stable" aggression trajectory relative to individuals aligned with "chronic" and "delayed" aggression trajectories. Implications for targeted intervention and future research are discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2016.10.035DOI Listing

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