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1 ed at an elite level in sport, music, or the military.
2 as an individual treatment among active-duty military.
3 s is important to safeguard citizens and the military.
4 s and a growing concern among members of the military.
5 s public health concern, particularly in the military.
6 or on behalf of, the US government or the US military.
7 uide efforts to prevent self-harm within the military.
8 ed high for those who had separated from the military 6 or more years ago (HR 1.63, 1.45-1.82).
9  = 11,258 cadets entering training at the US Military Academy at West Point.
10 , longitudinal study enrolled active-duty US military after concussive blast injury (n = 50) in the a
11 g Royal Marines and Army personnel in the UK military after deployment to Afghanistan.
12    Despite this large range of capabilities, militaries also have limitations when engaging in global
13 policies that can help close the gap between military and civilian actors to catalyse the contributio
14 re predisposed to work for the state in both military and civilian capacities.
15 rsonnel and their families and dependents in military and civilian facilities across the United State
16 iciary medical claims from United States DOD military and civilian facilities, January 1, 2003 throug
17 lacking, as are structured opportunities for military and civilian organisations to engage one anothe
18 ed as the common mode of neurotrauma amongst military and civilian personnel due to an increased insu
19 r immersive programs where surgeons from the military and civilian sectors can gain exposure to the t
20 s are a significant source of injury in both military and civilian sectors.
21 d practical advances in trauma care, in both military and civilian settings, and presents directions
22 dvances have resulted from exchanges between military and civilian surgeons.
23 grams to promote reciprocal learning between military and civilian surgery.
24 eview process relevant to improving both the military and civilian trauma care systems.
25                                 Ten cohorts, military and civilian, contribute blood-derived DNA meth
26 d 18- to 21-year-olds serving in the Israeli military and examined in military mental health outpatie
27 f these compounds is of utmost importance in military and forensic applications.
28 vector control programme in partnership with military and police forces, known as the Civil-Military
29 ; UAVs) are employed for surveillance by the military and police, which suggests that drone-captured
30 asingly is also used privately in sport, the military and recreation.
31 etection of airborne pathogens is a critical military and security concern.
32 electric vehicles, consumer electronics, and military and space applications.
33   Sulfur mustard is a chemical agent of high military and terroristic significance.
34 describe M. canettii infections among French military and their families between 1998 and 2015.
35 buse history may be more likely to enter the military, and child abuse exposure may increase the like
36 fficient sleep is pervasive (e.g., aviation, military, and medicine).
37 carbon nanotubes (CNTs) can lead to medical, military, and other applications.
38 lized water grid for disaster relief, rural, military, and other applications.
39  human cultures and is central to religious, military, and political activities, which require people
40  not limited to Border Guard Police, Myanmar military, and Rakhine extremists.
41 rspective of the Department of Defense for a military applicant screening program.
42 rmous benefit to civilian national security, military applications, and environmental monitoring.
43 ormous impact on civilian national security, military applications, and environmental monitoring.
44 applications in human-electronic interfaces, military applications, and smart robots.
45 terials processing, laser ranging, medicine, military applications, biomacromolecule materials, remot
46 -tetrazocine), an energetic material used in military applications, may be released to the environmen
47 at the time of conscription into the Swedish military (at 18 years of age).
48 ctoria Cross is the United Kingdom's premier military award for bravery, presented for gallantry duri
49  and AFFF-impacted groundwaters from 15 U.S. military bases was conducted to identify the remaining P
50 am (AFFF) has been documented at hundreds of military bases, airports, and firefighter training facil
51 16 to 19 years who were conscripted into the military between 1972 and 1994.
52 h that of 141,715 veterans who served in the military between 1996 and 2002 but were not deployed to
53 n Iraq or Afghanistan who separated from the military between fiscal years 2001 and 2011 and subseque
54 specific to service members during- and post-military career.
55  brain specimens from male civilian (ie, non-military) cases with no history of blast exposure, inclu
56 ose COVID-linked deaths already exceed their military casualties from all campaigns since 1945, we be
57 lysis of battlefield data examined 21,089 US military casualties that occurred during the Afghanistan
58 US-MTF or UK-MTF, surgical decompression, US military casualty and surgery performed by a neurosurgeo
59 Percy Military Hospital in Paris, the French Military Center for Epidemiology and Public Health, and
60               The PROWL-1 study was a single-military center study of 262 active-duty Navy personnel
61  community settings, seven were delivered in military clinics for veterans or active military personn
62  of post-deployment PTSD symptoms in a Dutch military cohort (N=93; B=-0.054, t=-3.706, p-value=3.66
63 al leukocyte count and physical fitness in a military cohort of 3,453 healthy young Taiwanese males a
64 elopment of PTSD symptoms in two prospective military cohorts (one discovery and one replication data
65             Retrospective cohort study of US military combat casualties in Afghanistan between April
66                 Among medically evacuated US military combat causalities in Afghanistan, blood produc
67 s associated with extremity wounds in recent military conflicts have highlighted the need for clinica
68 n designated as a signature injury of modern military conflicts.
69                                 For example, military-connected youth had 73% greater odds of recent
70 lood pressure (n = 1555979) were measured at military conscription at a mean (SD) age of 18.3 (0.6) y
71 grades at age 16 years and IQ test scores at military conscription at age 18 years.
72 grades at age 16 years and IQ test scores at military conscription.
73  a longitudinal study of 50,373 Swedish male military conscripts (ages 18-19) who were followed in th
74 gitudinal cohort study enrolled Swedish male military conscripts aged 18 or 19 years from January 1,
75         In this large cohort of Swedish male military conscripts, low aerobic capacity and muscle str
76                                   First, the military considers a confluence of factors before determ
77 es of M. canettii infection among the French military consisted mainly of adenitis; disseminated form
78 , we investigate whether or not working in a military context influences the sense of agency and outc
79 nctioning of male coalitionary behavior in a military context may run contrary to some of the argumen
80 tives become institutionally inverted within military contexts.
81 ion problems surrounding in-group defense in military contexts.
82 sociation studies of mental health in the US military contributed participants.
83 +/- 16.7% compared to age and gender matched military controls (N = 20, all males), whose average was
84 d PTSD patients (N = 23), and trauma-exposed military controls (N = 23).
85 litary and police forces, known as the Civil-Military Cooperation (CIMIC) programme, that was targete
86 g headache, muscle and joint pain with their military counterparts without GWI related diffuse body p
87                         We used the Stanford Military Data Repository, which contains comprehensive m
88  and currently account for almost 20% of all military deaths.
89           Inclusion criteria were PTSD after military deployment and stable medication therapy.
90 tic brain injury (TBI), acted as the primary military deployment-related driver of PT/BRI symptoms.
91 eland and decreased mobility, as well as the military effectiveness of the Mongol cavalry, while desp
92 lines-both within and outside militaries-for military engagement in global health are often lacking,
93 ype 4 and 7 vaccine is currently given to US military enlisted recruit trainees, it is not routinely
94                        Men were sampled from military enrollment records and women from electoral rec
95 tary weapons and some other types of surplus military equipment (SME) that had been prohibited by the
96 ictory claims about the effects of providing military equipment to local law enforcement, but this in
97 ent policy changes to evaluate the effect of military equipment: the Obama Administration recalled pr
98  recent case of Jade Helm 15--where a simple military exercise turned out to be perceived as the begi
99 or cadets) and types (cadets vs privates) of military experience may modulate these effects.
100  high-security scenario: the inspection of a military facility to confirm the absence or presence of
101                                              Militaries focus on strategic, operational, and tactical
102           Guidelines-both within and outside militaries-for military engagement in global health are
103 ce in their hamlets, 408 (77%) reported that military forces used helicopters, 372 (70%) reported mil
104                                              Military-grade explosives such as 2,4,6-trinitroluene (T
105 d as the strongest predictor of academic and military grades, but noncognitive attributes were more p
106 ) in 73 service members treated according to military guidelines based on clinical data and the local
107 ers for applications like medical microbots, military hardware, and nanosatellite systems.
108 as political factors have influenced how the military has addressed the mental health needs resulting
109                                              Militaries have many capabilities applicable to global h
110 sonnel and their dependents) treated at both military health care facilities and civilian trauma cent
111 bers, but provide tailored interventions for military health care providers based on the large body o
112 ve trauma patients who were beneficiaries of Military Health Insurance (military personnel and their
113 alysis using the Department of Defense (DOD) Military Health System (MHS) data on beneficiary medical
114 btained from the Department of Defense (DOD) Military Health System (MHS).
115 c agents within the US Department of Defense Military Health System between April 1, 2013, and Decemb
116                    The Department of Defense Military Health System Data Repository was queried for i
117 dren <18 years enrolled as dependents in the Military Health System Data Repository who underwent unc
118 tion in the primary care setting in the U.S. Military Health System.
119 ed to endemic regions were recruited through military healthcare facilities (2015-17).
120                          In the equal access military healthcare system, African Americans have outco
121 ent of Defense's Central Cancer Registry and Military Heath System medical claims databases.
122 mote fort literacy had spread throughout the military hierarchy, down to the quartermaster and probab
123 line questionnaires ascertained athletic and military history.
124                     We used data from the US Military HIV Natural History Study (NHS), to examine the
125  (6.4%), veteran affairs institution (2.7%), military hospital (1%), and Indian Health Service (0.09%
126 obacteria in the Biology Department at Percy Military Hospital in Paris, the French Military Center f
127 HCV infection at a single study site (Rwanda Military Hospital, Kigali, Rwanda).
128 within the first year of separation from the military (HR 2.49, 95% CI 2.12-2.91), and remained high
129 tudies if more than 20% of participants were military, if they were of deminers, if they were from hi
130 d roles, responsibilities, and approaches of militaries in global health, drawing on examples and cas
131  countries show a growing willingness to use militaries in support of global health efforts.
132 included market workers at sites adjacent to military installations and workers at highway settlement
133 from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (CSMC), the Military Institute of Medicine in Warsaw and the TCGA po
134 er ( P < .001) than those with US private or military insurance.
135                                          The military lifestyle often includes continuous operations
136 cytokine responses when civilians followed a military-like treatment schedule with surgical debrideme
137               It explains how the particular military, logistic, and geographic conditions of this th
138  with anaerobic fitness in physically active military males.
139  and Europe, as well as lessons learned from military mass casualty medicine.
140 rm risk that a group challenges the state by military means.
141 udy was approved by the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center institutional review board and i
142 udy was approved by the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center institutional review board and i
143 ransfusion capability after 2012 to deployed military medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) units enabled a co
144 nalyzed the original records of World War II military medical units housed in the National Archives a
145 enry M Jackson Foundation for Advancement of Military Medicine and the US Department of Defense, Rago
146 ess (ILI), influenza, and pneumonia among US military members.
147 onal study examined the relationships in 325 military men and women, aged 20 to 45 years in Taiwan.
148       Results were less consistent using the military men as the reference group.
149  reference groups: a sample of employees and military men.
150 ving in the Israeli military and examined in military mental health outpatient clinics across 72 cons
151                                    Achieving military mission objectives requires high levels of perf
152             15 031 patients arrived alive at military MTF after TBI.
153 ncidence, TBI and treatment in US and UK-led military MTF to ascertain if differences in deployed tra
154 he UK should deploy neurosurgeons to forward military MTF whenever possible in line with their US cou
155  depression and later back pain among female military nurses.
156  of previous unit suicide attempts varied by military occupational specialty (MOS) and unit size.
157 r influential groups within society, such as military officers, journalists, and business executives.
158 rcumstances, which peaked during three large military operations (MO), was associated with increased
159 children from North Waziristan due to recent military operations was presumed to favor the widespread
160                                During recent military operations, eye-related injuries have risen in
161 th a novel nutritional supplement to enhance military performance objectives and to provide optimal e
162 mer participants of other contact sports, ex-military personnel and after physical abuse(4-7).
163  beneficiaries of Military Health Insurance (military personnel and their dependents) treated at both
164 data, detailing medical services incurred by military personnel and their families and dependents in
165 -connected disability that currently affects military personnel and veterans.
166  of warzone participation among contemporary military personnel and veterans.
167 such as collision sport athletes and certain military personnel are of particular interest owing to t
168 etrospective multivariate analysis of all US military personnel between 2001 and 2011 (n=110 035 573
169 at accession among younger recently deployed military personnel born after 1965 was 0.98/1000 (95% co
170 y of hepatitis C viral (HCV) infection among military personnel can inform potential Department of De
171                                         1455 military personnel committed suicide from 2005 to 2011.
172                 The risk of suicide among US military personnel deployed for peacekeeping missions is
173 ld, such as those that occur in athletes and military personnel exposed to repetitive head impacts.
174 les the alterations observed in athletes and military personnel exposed to rmTBI, these changes could
175 se exposure, and suicide-related outcomes in military personnel have not been examined.
176    Survey of 8742 women who were active-duty military personnel in the US Armed Forces at any time fr
177 use exposure and suicide-related outcomes in military personnel relative to civilians is unknown.
178 th many associations significantly weaker in military personnel relative to civilians.
179 lications in risk assessment for active duty military personnel under non-clinician-administered sett
180 ncreased hazard rate of death by suicide for military personnel varies by time since exposure to depl
181  emotion dysregulation-is prevalent among US military personnel who have returned from Operations End
182              Gulf War illness (GWI) afflicts military personnel who served during the Persian Gulf Wa
183 trajectories of PTSD symptoms among deployed military personnel with and without combat exposure, we
184 med a prospective, observational study of US military personnel with blast-related concussive traumat
185 affects millions of civilians, athletes, and military personnel yearly.
186  (TBI) is one of the most common injuries to military personnel, a population often exposed to stress
187 le, unsheltered homeless people, active-duty military personnel, and nursing home residents.
188 sports, elderly individuals, young children, military personnel, and victims of domestic violence.
189 d in military clinics for veterans or active military personnel, five were conducted in refugee camps
190 oses, excluding studies of active or veteran military personnel, forensic populations or studies of p
191 or blast exposure numbers and intensities in military personnel, in combat or training operations.
192 rations carried out at high altitude (HA) by military personnel, pilots, and astronauts may trigger h
193 selected 10,000 battle-injured United States military personnel.
194  dispatching 1200 workers, including Chinese military personnel.
195 etes and in the prevention of heat stroke in military personnel.
196 T) for the prevention of suicide attempts in military personnel.
197 iarrhea in children, travelers, and deployed military personnel.
198 Olympic athletes, elite musicians, or expert military personnel.
199 icians in the private sector vs salary-based military physicians) with the odds of procedural interve
200 untargeted, and into civilian-induced, (para)military/political, or protests.
201 of causing mass destruction to a civilian or military population by inhalation of toxic bioaerosol.
202                                       In the military population, improving existing treatments such
203 d using biologically compatible civilian and military populations as cytokine response is highly infl
204 n self-disclosure of symptoms, stigma within military populations, and limitations identifying those
205  morbidities and mortalities in civilian and military populations.
206  on Myanmar police, Border Guard Police, and military posts, killing 12 security personnel on Aug 25,
207 e as a single agent is effective in treating military PTSD.
208 se of their development for geopolitical and military purposes.
209 ing, hence, will have a great impact on both military pyrotechnics and commercial firework sectors.
210 raw interest from the civilian fireworks and military pyrotechnics communities for further developmen
211 press nfsI could be used to remediate TNT on military ranges, but this could require steps to mitigat
212 nt budgets, US economic competitiveness, and military readiness.
213       Respiratory adenovirus infection among military recruits is a serious problem, in some cases re
214 ldren, men who have sex with men, prisoners, military recruits, residents of long-term care facilitie
215 etect the presence of disease in athletes or military recruits.
216 dicted incident back pain in a population of military registered nurses when controlling for relevant
217  the highly repetitive nature of sports- and military-related head injury.
218 izing corneal puncture injuries as seen in a military relevant clinical setting and a realistic appro
219 -speed solenoid device suitable for creating military-relevant injuries.
220  investigation builds on previous studies on military-relevant tungsten (W) to more thoroughly explor
221 iation study of PTSD to date, involving a US military sample, limited evidence of association for spe
222 ver, eating disorders remain understudied in military samples.
223 ttings and populations (e.g., the workplace, military, schools); (c) psychological and neurobiologica
224 hysical and mental health outcomes following military separation.
225 ast T. H. Marshall, scholars have recognized military service as a form of sacrifice that warrants co
226 gression models adjusted for demographic and military service characteristics, odds of experiencing h
227  Israeli adolescents evaluated for mandatory military service from 1967 to 1997.
228 ; SD, 0.7 years) who enlisted for compulsory military service from 1969 to 2005.
229 de, population-based study of candidates for military service in Israel attending the draft board in
230 5 men aged 18 years who were conscripted for military service in Sweden during 1972-1996.
231 nce between United States and United Kingdom military service member casualties (P = 0.38).
232                        All participants were military service members or dependents recruited between
233     Participants were family members of U.S. military service members who died of any cause since Sep
234 es and markers, in brain specimens from male military service members with chronic blast exposures an
235         Considerable decline was observed in military service members with concussive blast TBI when
236 further investigation of eating disorders in military service members.
237  increase the risk of those conditions among military service members.
238 ctors with suicides among current and former military service members.
239 ve PD risk in a diverse nationwide cohort of military service veterans, and the first to suggest a po
240                                              Military service was also associated with ALS in 2 time
241    Suicides that occurred during active-duty military service were counted from June 1, 2001, through
242 eling (HR = 3.71, 95% CI: 1.44, 9.54) during military service were significant risks for suicide deat
243 ng global threats and the unique stresses of military service, are likely to be felt for years to com
244 his finding suggests a treatment effect from military service, thus dovetailing with the hypothesis t
245 ivilian public jobs as recompense for active military service.
246 l examination to determine their fitness for military service.
247 oral assessment to determine eligibility for military service.
248                         Although active duty military servicemembers have high rates of chlamydia and
249           In postmortem brains from Veterans/military Servicemembers with blast-related TBI, we found
250 In the first cohort consisting of male Dutch military servicemen (n=93), the emergence of PTSD sympto
251                                              Military sexual trauma (MST) is associated with adverse
252  disorders was similar in women and men, and military sexual trauma exposure was independently associ
253                                              Military sexual trauma screen status remained independen
254  traditional risk factors (eg, homelessness, military sexual trauma, and mental health disorders); (4
255 tion in the marine environment surrounding a military site in Norway was investigated.
256  Repeated historical applications of AFFF at military sites were a result of fire-fighter training ex
257 ion strategies to clean up TNT from polluted military sites.
258 and mobile groundwater contaminant common to military sites.
259 n, and whether it derives from a civilian or military source, is of major importance for society and
260 es were obtained from various commercial and military sources around the country.
261 ury was mathematically modeled to define the military standard 1% lung injury threshold.
262                                           US military suicides have increased substantially over the
263  to arterial repair occurring among American military surgeons in the last 6 months of the war in the
264 s that civilian surgery has learned from the military system and vice-versa.
265 ical intervention in the universally insured military system, versus the civilian setting in Californ
266 0-950 CE) is interpreted as an escalation of military tactics that played a role in the socio-economi
267 njury and loss of consciousness is common in military TBI.
268  methods were adapted predominantly from the military theater.
269                                              Military trainees are at increased risk for methicillin-
270 sis, we obtained anterior-naris samples from military trainees with cutaneous abscesses and from asym
271 a- and interclass transmission of MRSA among military trainees.
272 ess fracture risk is elevated during initial military training (IMT), particularly in lower-extremity
273 control-EEG-NF or NoNF), taking place at the military training base.
274                        Men enlisted in basic military training between December 2009 and December 201
275 individuals (n = 180) undergoing a stressful military training programme were randomly assigned to si
276 cinated officer candidates attending initial military training.
277 the downside risks proposed by proponents of military transfers.
278 associated diarrhea, and a bane for deployed military troops.
279 ention programs have become ubiquitous among military units; identifying temporal trends and nonclini
280  forces used helicopters, 372 (70%) reported military vehicles, and 113 (21%) reported tanks in these
281 ent Health Questionnaire, the PTSD Checklist-Military Version for PTSD, and the Symptom Checklist-90
282 on systems have remained largely confined to military vessels.
283                A retrospective cohort of 332 military veteran patients who underwent umbilical hernia
284             The sample consisted of 346 U.S. military veterans (89.3% male; 71.4% white) who deployed
285      To address this problem, ten healthy US military veterans (mean age = 32.6 years +/- 6.11; 1 fem
286 ts with sports-related TBI (sTBI) and TBI in military veterans (mtTBI) without cognitive impairment.
287 ple of trauma-exposed European-American U.S. military veterans (N = 2030).
288                        Recent trauma-exposed military veterans (n = 46) were grouped into PTSD (n = 2
289  to reassess PTSD in 598 service members and military veterans a median of 7.9 years (interquartile r
290 ess disorder (PTSD) is a major problem among military veterans and civilians alike, yet its pathophys
291  associated with unplanned readmission among military veterans following surgery.
292 lth toll of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars on military veterans has been considerable, yet little is k
293 sing a national primary prevention cohort of military veterans receiving care in the Department of Ve
294 pared with standard glucose lowering in 1791 military veterans with type 2 diabetes resulted in a ris
295 nge of special sample populations (including military veterans, college fraternity/sorority members,
296 as significantly elevated in serum from PTSD military veterans, relative to combat-exposed control su
297 e common among civilian trauma survivors and military veterans.
298 le consisted of rural-dwelling United States Military Veterans.
299 ed local law enforcement agencies' access to military weapons and some other types of surplus militar
300 0.0-13.9 g/dL with physical fitness in 3,666 military young males in Taiwan in 2014.

 
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