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Journal Article

Citation

Conard R, Emanuel R. Mil. Med. 1998; 163(9): 594-598.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, VA, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Association of Military Surgeons of the United States)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9753983

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine if a history of aggressive/impulsive behavior adversely affected the return to full duty of a military psychiatric inpatient population. METHOD: Charts were reviewed for aggressive/impulsive behavior as indicated by self-report on a standardized admission form and by history in 211 consecutive admissions pooled from two separate 2-month intervals during a 9-month period. RESULTS: Seventy-three percent of the population was between the ages of 17 and 24 years. Sixty-eight percent of the population reported a history of at least one school suspension/expulsion, arrest, or military nonjudicial punishment (males, 74%; females, 45%). Seven percent of patients reporting aggressive/impulsive behavior were returned to full duty unconditionally, compared with 28% of patients not reporting said behavior. Eighteen percent of patients met the criteria for adult antisocial behavior. Only one patient with adult antisocial behavior was returned to full duty. CONCLUSIONS: This study found that a history of aggressive/impulsive behavior was positively correlated with substance abuse and negatively correlated with return to full military duty.


Language: en

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