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1 nd impairments of mental disorders in the US Army.
2 l Forces status to represent the active-duty army.
3 Infectious Diseases and US Department of the Army.
4 ite, and 382361 (63.5%) were enlisted in the Army.
5 to designate the fortifications of the Roman army.
6 ccounting to date of suicide attempts in the Army.
7 V genotype 3 were likely from the Soviet Red Army.
8 des per 100,000 person-years in the total US Army.
9 pending on the level of threat from invading armies.
10 y service were high for Air Force (10.9) and Army (10.6), medium for Navy (9.1) and Coast Guard (7.9)
11 n [SD] age 24.5 [7.0] years; 148 104 [34.5%] Army, 101 299 [32.6%] Navy, 115 288 [26.86%] Air Force,
12 4%), younger than 21 years when entering the army (62.2%), white (59.8%), high school educated (76.6%
13 s committed by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, a non-state insurgent group, on Myanmar police, Bo
14 associated with registry participation, with Army (adjusted odds ratio (OR)=4.7, 95% confidence inter
15 associated with respiratory symptoms in both Army (adjusted odds ratio = 1.73, 95% confidence interva
16 en hampered by the lack of integration among Army administrative data systems.
17  data from 3 randomized controlled trials in Army, Air Force, and Marine recruits (n = 401; 179 men,
18 botulinum antitoxin A-G obtained from the US Army also did not neutralize the second BoNT.
19 -1,3,5-triazine) in an aquifer near the Iowa Army Ammunition Plant in Middletown, IA.
20 ant role mercenaries played in ancient Greek armies and highlight how participation in war contribute
21 ort to 1) Vietnam veterans who served in the army and 2) a more specific definition of IPF.
22 rds from the Department of Defense to assess Army and Air Force veterans who were deployed between 20
23 dictors of suicide and accident deaths using Army and Department of Defense administrative data syste
24 d individual-level person-month records from Army and Department of Defense administrative data syste
25                         US Department of the Army and GeneOne Life Science.
26 iple sclerosis cases were identified through Army and Navy physical disability databases for 1992 thr
27 G, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cohort study of US Army and Navy service members from January 1, 2013, to D
28  look at the mental health of members of the Army and the Marine Corps who were involved in combat op
29  war against the Ugandan People's Democratic Army and the people of northern Uganda.
30  suicide rate among soldiers, in 2008 the US Army and US National Institute of Mental Health funded t
31 an Museum of Natural History and in the U.S. Army, and (e) work at the University of Kansas, especial
32 were men, 91% were enlisted, 82% were in the army, and 86% sustained an injury in Iraq.
33 ion were enlisted, female, White, Reservist, Army, and health care workers.
34 e techniques, introduced first aid in the US Army, and helped start a precursor to Annals of Surgery.
35 e weapons buried with the Chinese Terracotta Army, and the same weapons' very good preservation.
36 eeded CTmax for the most thermally sensitive army ant castes.
37  the microbiota of workers and larvae of the army ant Eciton burchellii with those of 13 myrmecophile
38      In this study, we addressed whether the army ant Eciton hamatum: (a) can detect potential prey o
39  region and highly host specific on a single army ant genus.
40                           Here, we show that army ant mass raiding has evolved from a different form
41 across chimpanzee study sites in relation to army ant species (Dorylus spp.) and dipping location (ne
42              We compared the availability of army ant species and dipping tool length between the two
43                             Because no known army ant species lacks any component of the army ant syn
44 fferences, and we conducted CTmax assays for army ant species with varying degrees of surface activit
45                              We then discuss army ant symbionts as examples of large and primarily pa
46                                          The army ant syndrome of behavioral and reproductive traits
47  army ant species lacks any component of the army ant syndrome, this group represents an extraordinar
48 longer than S-group tools, despite identical army ant target species availabilities.
49  showed that in a tropical island's guild of army ant-following birds, a new behavioural phenotype em
50                                              Army ants (Eciton) form collective assemblages out of th
51                                              Army ants (Formicidae: Dorylinae) and their hundreds of
52                          We used Neotropical army ants (Formicidae: Ecitoninae) as models.
53                                              Army ants are ecologically dominant arthropod predators
54                                    New World army ants are largely specialist predators of other ants
55  arose in parallel during the Cenozoic, when army ants diversified into modern genera [12] and rose t
56       The currently accepted view holds that army ants evolved multiple times on separate continents.
57                            Additionally, the army ants had the strongest response to the nest materia
58 d molecular information places the origin of army ants in the mid-Cretaceous, consistent with a Gondw
59 ated study of a living architecture in which army ants interconnect their bodies to span gaps.
60                                    New world army ants live in species-rich assemblages throughout th
61                                              Army ants responded strongly to odours derived from prey
62 vioral and reproductive adaptations found in army ants throughout the world is inherited from a uniqu
63 elow-ground temperatures in habitats used by army ants to test for microhabitat temperature differenc
64 field experiments, we tested the response of army ants to the following four odour treatments: alarm
65                                              Army ants vary in microhabitat use from largely subterra
66                                              Army ants' self-assembled bridges are built on unstable
67         If ubiquitous across the Neotropical army ants, then this olfaction-based ecological speciali
68 derated thermal environment for below-ground army ants, while maximum surface raid temperatures somet
69 es a mechanism for dietary specialization in army ants.
70 family Aenictogitoninae as sister to Dorylus army ants.
71 eplacement therapy has been used by the U.S. Army at the combat support hospital echelon of care sinc
72 hort of recently deployed soldiers from 2 US Army bases, Fort Carson and Fort Bragg (2009 to 2015).
73 healthy young women before and after 8 wk of Army basic combat training (average energy expenditure:
74  August 5, 2017, and April 15, 2023, at 2 US Army BCT sites.
75 HbAS and who were on active duty in the U.S. Army between January 2011 and December 2014.
76    From October 1944 to May 1945, the German army blockaded food supplies to the Netherlands, subject
77 om a prospective 4-wave survey study of 3 US Army brigade combat teams that deployed to Afghanistan i
78 ostic study included 4771 soldiers from 3 US Army brigade combat teams who completed assessments betw
79 thern Thailand who were conscripted into the army by a lottery in 1991, 1993, and 1995.
80 t wave of respiratory illness occurred in US Army camps during March-May 1918 and in Britain during M
81 ortality rates for respiratory illness in 37 army camps, as well as the rates of repeated episodes of
82 difficulty prevalence, socio-demographics or Army career characteristics predicting difficulty RR.
83 plain associations of socio-demographics and Army career characteristics with difficulty RR.
84         Controlling for sociodemographic and Army career correlates, which were broadly consistent wi
85           Adjusting for sociodemographic and Army career differences attenuated but did not eliminate
86  range of data systems (sociodemographic, US Army career, criminal justice, and medical or pharmacy)
87                                           US Army CDMRP PH/TBI research programme.
88 he Tick-Borne Disease Laboratory of the U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine
89           A similar decline within the Union Army cohort as between cohorts, makes measurement error
90 nsition to an intensivist-directed ICU in an Army Combat Support Hospital improved outcomes among ICU
91  1,305 (7.1%) pediatric patients admitted to Army combat support hospitals who required 12% of all ho
92 y at age 13 years and in equivalent tests at army conscription (age 18 years).
93 sectional study was conducted among the male army conscripts in 2018 at 36 military training units na
94 ic, active-duty personnel in the Prospective Army Coronary Calcium (PACC) project.
95 w size, weight, power, and cost (Low SWaP-C) Army Corps of Engineers potentiostat (ACEstat) based on
96 e was still able to pay indemnities and fund armies despite the loss of its traditional silver source
97                                      As a US Army dietitian, I learned firsthand how to conduct metab
98 nternship at Touro Infirmary, service in the army during World War I, and finally a postgraduate cour
99  the Great Depression and served in the U.S. Army during World War II.
100 ied all operator, support, and other regular Army enlisted person-months from 2004 through 2012 with
101                  In this study of US regular Army enlisted soldiers during the Iraq and Afghanistan w
102 onth records for all active-duty, regular US Army, enlisted soldiers who attempted suicide from Janua
103 dinal, retrospective cohort study of Regular Army-enlisted soldiers on active duty from 2004 through
104  representative survey of soldiers in the US Army entering basic combat training from April 1, 2011,
105 enovirus vaccine administration and dates of Army entry obtained for cancer cases and controls.
106 Medical Research Council, AstraZeneca UK, US Army, EU-Biomed.
107                         Sociodemographic and Army experience predictors were generally similar for su
108                                       The US Army experienced a sharp increase in soldier suicides be
109 nd exposure was estimated for the 349,291 US Army Gulf War veterans.
110 -based cognitive-behavioral therapy, and the Army has developed Battlemind postdeployment early inter
111  Since the late 1980s, the Lord's Resistance Army has waged war against the Ugandan People's Democrat
112                   Suicide attempts in the US Army have risen in the past decade.
113 Human Subjects in Medical Research, the U.S. Army Human Subjects Research Review Board, and the Austr
114 al status on premature discharge from the US Army in a large cohort of first-time-enlisted, active-du
115 e true American spirit, and served the Union Army in the Civil War as a surgeon.
116       The rate of suicide attempts in the US Army increased sharply during the wars in Afghanistan an
117                        We surveyed 2525 U.S. Army infantry soldiers 3 to 4 months after their return
118 spective case-control study of SSTI among US Army infantry trainees at Fort Benning, Georgia, from Ju
119  field-based, cluster-randomized trial in US Army Infantry trainees from May 2010 through January 201
120   A computerized survey administered at 3 US Army installations (NSS) and a web/telephone survey (STA
121 on study of GLS-5300 done at the Walter Reed Army Institute for Research Clinical Trials Center (Silv
122 itute of Infectious Diseases and Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (USAMRIID-WRAIR).
123     Since 1986, investigators at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR) have been using contr
124 dical Research Institute (KEMRI)-Walter Reed Army Institute of research in Kisumu and the KEMRI/US Ce
125 ine Beecham Biologicals with the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, protective efficacy of sever
126 ne placebo, in a ratio of 4:1 at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD, USA, or o
127                            The United States Army Institute of Surgical Research (USAISR) Burn Center
128 et al., is Google DeepMind's powerful 'Swiss army knife' for predicting molecular effects from non-co
129                     Defensins are the 'Swiss army knife' in innate immunity against microbial pathoge
130                                   Our 'Swiss army knife' toolbox will help better understand AID biol
131 g the diverse functional features of a Swiss army knife, requires strong and prompt molecular regulat
132 ent that cargo receptors are acting as Swiss army knives in selective autophagy by recognizing the ca
133 ored many junior surgeons and challenged the Army leadership to treat hemorrhagic shock with blood ra
134 noparticle (SpFN) vaccine co-formulated with Army Liposomal Formulation (ALFQ) adjuvant containing mo
135 (SpFN) vaccine candidate adjuvanted with the Army Liposomal Formulation including QS21 (ALFQ) in non-
136 RS-CoV-2 spike protein (RFN) adjuvanted with Army Liposomal Formulation QS-21 (ALFQ).
137                                   Adding the Army Liposome Formulation + QS21 (ALFQ) adjuvant to the
138                Here, we demonstrate that the Army Liposome Formulation containing MPLA, and QS-21 (AL
139 mental disorder are known to exist in the US Army, little is known about the proportions of these dis
140 ar II, he served as Commanding Officer of an army malaria survey unit in combat zones of New Guinea a
141 DC, area and scheduled to undergo a periodic Army-mandated physical examination were enrolled between
142 ls of satisfaction (mean = 6.10) than either Army (mean = 5.27, Cohen's d = 0.75, p<.001) or Navy (me
143 onal Medical Center (33%), or at Walter Reed Army Medical Center (56%).
144 rug Administration (FDA) and the Walter Reed Army Medical Center (Washington, DC).
145 ur A. baumannii strains from the Walter Reed Army Medical Center (WRAMC) isolated between 2008 and 20
146 e reports published or presented from Brooke Army Medical Center between 2014 and 2022 with an infect
147 servicemembers consented to assessment at an army medical center from March 8, 2012, to September 23,
148 ional NASH patients identified in the Brooke Army Medical Center Hepatology clinic, were queried abou
149 ontrolled trial conducted at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center of 200 community-based patients aged
150 2014 of US military personnel at the Madigan Army Medical Center who had been deployed within the pre
151            A university medical center, a US Army medical center, and 5 community hospitals in Washin
152  by the critical care service at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, as well as a discussion of our appr
153 tuhl Regional Medical Center and Walter Reed Army Medical Center, whereas patients sustaining burns h
154 llow-up data were available from Walter Reed Army Medical Center.
155 8 to 70 years old were recruited from Brooke Army Medical Center.
156 emofiltration or hemodiafiltration at Brooke Army Medical Center.
157 ancy and the postpartum in 3,254 women at an army medical center.
158 vaginal swab samples from women attending an army medical clinic were culture positive for T. vaginal
159                                     The U.S. Army Medical Command implemented programmatic changes to
160                                        Royal Army Medical Corps, Surgeon General's Research Strategy
161 f Periodic Examination Center of the Israeli Army Medical Corps.
162                                          The Army Medical Department has developed initiatives to dec
163 e of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; and US Army Medical Materiel Development Activity, a subordinat
164 01CA261995, R01CA249279, and R50CA251961; US Army Medical Research and Development Command grants W81
165 nt Activity, a subordinate command of the US Army Medical Research and Development Command.
166                                           US Army Medical Research and Materiel Command and Division
167 nd Medical Research Council of Australia, US Army Medical Research and Materiel Command, Cancer Counc
168  the Human Subjects Research Review Board of Army Medical Research and Materiel Command.
169 ical pipelines designed by the United States Army Medical Research Insititute of Infectious Diseases
170 ted biosafety level 4 laboratories at the US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases i
171                                       The US Army Medical Research Unit-Kenya (USAMRU-K) conducts sur
172 nals of China, First Affiliated Hospital and Army Medical University, US National Institutes of Healt
173                                           US Army Military Operational Medicine Research Program (MOM
174 oncentration camps (in 1900-1902), and in US Army mobilization camps during the First World War (in 1
175 t in this prospective cohort study of the US Army National Guard (2009-2014).
176                We studied a random sample of Army, Navy, and Marine Corps new recruits (2400 men and
177 rans of the Gulf War who were serving in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force and 618,335 othe
178                                          The armies of the United Kingdom, Germany, and France undert
179 tudy adds yet another soldier to the growing army of autoaggressive mechanisms that underlie RA.
180 rget proteins, and these are countered by an army of deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs).
181           As a consequence, cells possess an army of enzymes to repair their damaged chromosomes.
182 Healthcare, rendered by a faceless, uncaring army of protocol aficionados, will miss an opportunity t
183 y not well positioned to control the growing army of resistant pathogens, although academic instituti
184 al disease (NTD) control programs rely on an army of volunteers, or community drug distributors (CDDs
185                Volunteers recruited from the Army of Women with a history of breast cancer surgery to
186                               The "invisible army" of clinical microbiologists is facing major change
187                                     The U.S. Army official doctrine is that field dialysis is provide
188 ployed in the pre-hospital setting by the US Army, on haemorrhagic tolerance in humans is unknown.
189 s who required a medical waiver to enter the army (OR: 1.56; 95% CI: 1.48, 1.64) was higher than the
190 nk groups; and military service in the Navy, Army, or Marines were all risk factors for hip OA.
191 ments: This work was supported by the Luke's Army Pediatric Cancer Research Fund St.
192 m 2006 to 2011, the rates were highest among army personnel (19.13 to 29.44 cases per 100 000).
193     The analysis was computed on active-duty Army personnel (N = 473) of the 101st Airborne at Fort C
194 sociated with increased symptom reporting in Army personnel (P < 0.0001).
195 ve sample of 450 asymptomatic active-duty US Army personnel aged 39 to 45 years stationed within the
196 th predictor variables were constructed from Army personnel and medical records.
197                                  Active-duty Army personnel can be exposed to traumatic warzone event
198 conducting a cohort study of 300,000 male US Army personnel followed prospectively from January 1987
199 sed controlled trial among Royal Marines and Army personnel in the UK military after deployment to Af
200 esults of this study also suggest that among army personnel or marines who committed suicide, those w
201 630 consecutive consenting, active-duty U.S. Army personnel, 39 to 45 years of age, without known cor
202                         For male active-duty army personnel, the dose-related association between smo
203 nd their psychopathological correlates among Army personnel.
204 atic stress and related disorders among U.S. Army personnel.
205                           We describe a U.S. Army Ranger returning from duty in Afghanistan and Iraq
206 rge cohort of healthy, physically fit, young army recruits (n = 940).
207 d donors had positive samples as did 5 of 97 army recruits and 2 of 50 postpartum women.
208                 A substantial number of male army recruits are infected with C. trachomatis, but few
209 resence of asymmetrical hypertrophy in young army recruits before and after a period of intense exerc
210 ed 72% protection against disease in Israeli army recruits exposed to high rates (8-14%) of infection
211 7, urine samples from 13,204 new female U.S. Army recruits from 50 states were screened by ligase cha
212                One hundred forty-one British Army recruits homozygous for the ACE gene (79 DD and 62
213 dy changes in body composition in young male army recruits over 10 weeks of intensive physical traini
214 h was investigated in 144 young male British Army recruits undergoing a 10-week physical training pro
215   Non-health care-seeking male United States Army recruits were tested for Chlamydia trachomatis (n=2
216 nces; and by camp (for Boer internees and US Army recruits).
217 mized cohort of chlamydia screening among US Army recruits, although limited by lack of outpatient da
218 by magnetic resonance imaging in 215 healthy army recruits, and bone mineral density (BMD) by Dual X-
219  Swiss soldiers was halved as a result of an army reform (Army XXI), leading to a decrease in the ava
220 rtha Neuroscience and Pain Institute, and US Army Regional Anesthesia and Pain Management Initiative.
221        This study included all United States Army registered nurses who began work during 2011-2014 w
222 (10.5) years] and 301 from the Love Research Army registry [mean (SD) age, 59.2 (11.9) years]) partic
223 ole blood transfusion to include recent U.S. Army research from Afghanistan and Iraq.
224               Current guidelines from the US Army's Committee on Tactical Combat Casualty Care (CoTCC
225   Time trends in these predictors and in the Army's increased use of accession waivers (which relaxed
226 on that prevented them from meeting the U.S. Army's standards for physical fitness.
227 otentially actionable findings to inform the Army's suicide prevention efforts.
228 CI]) by female sex (2.4 [2.3-2.5]), entering Army service at 25 years or older (1.6 [1.5-1.8]), curre
229 cted by female sex (2.8 [2.0-4.1]), entering Army service at 25 years or older (2.0 [1.3-3.1]), curre
230                To determine if entry into US Army service during periods of administration of SV40-co
231 ilians, although some predictors distinct to Army service emerged that deserve more in-depth analysis
232                                    Male sex, Army service, discharge between the ages of 16 and 34 ye
233   Death by suicide or accident during active Army service.
234 ticipants were all members of the US Regular Army serving at any time between 2004 and 2009.
235                         On May 4, 2003, a US Army soldier received primary smallpox vaccination and e
236                                              Army soldiers (n = 143) who opted for refractive surgery
237                                    Deploying Army soldiers (n = 654) were examined prior to deploymen
238 S: Population-based descriptive study of all Army soldiers and Marines who completed the routine post
239 n a randomized controlled trial, active-duty Army soldiers at Fort Carson, Colo., who either attempte
240    We focused on male nondeployed Regular US Army soldiers because they account for the vast majority
241 ealth Study, we measured PTSD symptoms in US Army soldiers before and shortly after Iraq War deployme
242                             In this study of army soldiers deployed to the Iraq war, only PTSD sympto
243 t centers on 961 male and female active-duty Army soldiers drawn from the larger cohort.
244                                           US Army soldiers engage in strenuous activities and must ma
245 d suicide attempts among active-duty regular Army soldiers from January 1, 2004, through December 31,
246                                   Of 3502 US Army soldiers from one infantry brigade combat team unde
247                    The suicide rate among US Army soldiers has increased substantially in recent year
248  of lower socio-economic status, and Regular Army soldiers relative to reservists and those separated
249    In this diagnostic/prognostic study of US Army soldiers, an ML model was developed to predict post
250 nd currently and previously deployed Regular Army soldiers.
251 nd 2006 by 250,626 wives of active-duty U.S. Army soldiers.
252 use problems in two independent samples, the Army STARRS (STARRS, N=16 361) and the Yale-Penn (N=8084
253  current report presents a broad overview of Army STARRS and its findings to date on suicide deaths,
254 zed neurocognitive tests, and blood samples, Army STARRS and its longitudinal follow-up study (STARRS
255 ssess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS) is a multicomponent study designed to gener
256 ssess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS) New Soldier Study (NSS) surveyed soldiers e
257 ssess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS) New Soldier Study and wave 1 of the STARRS
258 ssess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS), a multicomponent epidemiological and neuro
259 sample of 5428 soldiers participating in the Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembe
260                                          The Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembe
261 NTS: In this observational cohort study, the Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembe
262 IPANTS: This cohort study used data from the Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembe
263 tional Institute of Mental Health funded the Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembe
264           Using administrative data from the Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembe
265 , retrospective cohort study, as part of the Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembe
266 in 1812,(1) countless soldiers of the French army succumbed to infectious diseases, but the responsib
267 e possibility of higher fatality rates among Army suicide attempts than among civilian suicide attemp
268 enerate actionable recommendations to reduce Army suicides and increase knowledge of risk and resilie
269                                       Of the Army suicides in 2004-2009, 41.5% occurred among 12.0% o
270                                Predictors of Army suicides were largely similar to those reported els
271 onths of hospital discharge (12.0% of all US Army suicides), equivalent to 263.9 suicides per 100,000
272 for new soldiers) do not explain the rise in Army suicides.
273 ma is the exclusive cause of the increase in Army suicides.
274 ing acute, uncontrollable stress during U.S. Army survival training.
275  These were initially introduced in European armies that were regularly ravaged by typhoid, especiall
276 nion, it is incumbent on us in the invisible army to continue to work with the American Society for M
277 art of a joint effort with the United States Army to develop a portable, rapid drug detection device.
278 ith no end in sight, putting pressure on our army to learn and adapt as never before.
279  focused on enlisted soldiers in their first Army tour.
280                 In this cohort study of 2988 Army trainees (median [IQR] age, 19.0 [19.0-22.0] years;
281 n Toxicology Network database; selected U.S. Army, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and U.S. Dep
282 rs of four U.S. combat infantry units (three Army units and one Marine Corps unit) using an anonymous
283 rganic groups, such as hospital departments, army units, or factory shifts.
284 cally with diverse case studies in the Roman Army, US Government, and a healthcare organisation.
285                         US Department of the Army, US National Institutes of Health, and the Thai Red
286 g measurements from three cohorts--the Union Army Veterans of the Civil War (N = 23,710; measurement
287 se-control study of cancer occurring in male Army veterans who entered service in 1959-1961.
288 t in families of enlisted soldiers in the US Army who had 1 or more substantiated reports of child ma
289                                         A US army-wide measles outbreak in 1917-18 resulted in more t
290 December 31, 2022, through the Love Research Army with ACBC analysis.
291 mong families of enlisted soldiers in the US Army with substantiated reports of child maltreatment, r
292 uits who make up the largest subgroup in the Army with the highest incidence of MSIs.
293 with more mental health diagnoses among U.S. Army wives, and these findings may have relevance for pr
294 ad of the blade, and not in response to beet army worm feeding.
295 s infested with two agricultural pests, beet army worm or two-spotted spider mites; pesticidal effica
296  in response to larval herbivory by the beet army worm, Spodoptera exigua.
297 ling blades in response to herbivory by beet army worm.
298 ailability in Switzerland resulting from the Army XXI reform was followed by an enduring decrease in
299  rate and the firearm suicide rate after the Army XXI reform.
300 rs was halved as a result of an army reform (Army XXI), leading to a decrease in the availability of

 
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