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Journal Article

Citation

VanTil LD, MacLean MB, Coulthard J, Murray R, Lourenso S, Camarda J, Lea T. Mil. Behav. Health 2022; 10(1): 17-26.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/21635781.2021.2007186

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Both the Canadian Armed Forces and Veterans Affairs Canada identified the need for a brief standardized tool to screen military members and veterans for the risk of a difficult adjustment to civilian life, frailty, suicide and homelessness. Data from Life After Service Studies (n = 8,101) were used to build logistic regression models of difficult adjustment to civilian life. The resulting brief risk screener was piloted in 2018 (n = 246). The modeling considered 28 risk indicators, used 17 of these to build the models, and maintained 8 questions for a brief risk screener. Optimal cutoff was found with a threshold of 3+ for difficult adjustment to civilian life, with 39% sensitivity (95% CI: 37.9 to 41.1) and 94% specificity (95% CI: 93.1 to 94.6). A longer 10 item questionnaire was implemented. Pilot participants who were help-seeking veteran clients had frequency by risk level of 42% low, 40% moderate, and 18% high. Pilot participants who were serving military members had frequency by risk level of 79% low, 13% moderate, and 8% high. In 2019, Canadian government implemented a new standardized risk screening tool to improve the effectiveness of services and referrals. © 2021 Crown Copyright.


Language: en

Keywords

Military; evidence-based practice; veterans; difficult adjustment; risk screening; screening implementation

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