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1 uide efforts to prevent self-harm within the military.
2 s that are increasingly being adopted by the military.
3 n in emergency medicine, pediatrics, and the military.
4 oyment might reduce mental illness in the UK military.
5 as an individual treatment among active-duty military.
6 s is important to safeguard citizens and the military.
7 s and a growing concern among members of the military.
8 s public health concern, particularly in the military.
9 ed high for those who had separated from the military 6 or more years ago (HR 1.63, 1.45-1.82).
10 ompounds are heavily used in agriculture and military activities, while non-organophosphate pesticide
11 rward combat hospitals indicating widespread military adoption of DCR.
12 , longitudinal study enrolled active-duty US military after concussive blast injury (n = 50) in the a
13 g Royal Marines and Army personnel in the UK military after deployment to Afghanistan.
14 chemes are used, representing Environmental, Military and Balanced stakeholder perspectives.
15                  Modern energetic motifs for military and civilian applications are most often evalua
16 t because of the increasing demands for both military and civilian applications.
17 rug resistant Acinetobacter baumannii plague military and civilian healthcare systems.
18 isciplinary research effort with hundreds of military and civilian physicians and scientists represen
19 e control laparotomy (DCL) is established in military and civilian practice.
20 d practical advances in trauma care, in both military and civilian settings, and presents directions
21 d 18- to 21-year-olds serving in the Israeli military and examined in military mental health outpatie
22 f these compounds is of utmost importance in military and forensic applications.
23 ; UAVs) are employed for surveillance by the military and police, which suggests that drone-captured
24 asingly is also used privately in sport, the military and recreation.
25 electric vehicles, consumer electronics, and military and space applications.
26   Sulfur mustard is a chemical agent of high military and terroristic significance.
27 uries are pervasive amongst athletes and the military and typically an individual returns to activity
28                                           In military and veteran populations, trials of the first-li
29  prove useful for oxygen storage in medical, military, and aerospace applications.
30 buse history may be more likely to enter the military, and child abuse exposure may increase the like
31 fficient sleep is pervasive (e.g., aviation, military, and medicine).
32 carbon nanotubes (CNTs) can lead to medical, military, and other applications.
33  human cultures and is central to religious, military, and political activities, which require people
34 rspective of the Department of Defense for a military applicant screening program.
35 applications in human-electronic interfaces, military applications, and smart robots.
36 terials processing, laser ranging, medicine, military applications, biomacromolecule materials, remot
37 -tetrazocine), an energetic material used in military applications, may be released to the environmen
38 fusion tensor imaging to investigate whether military-associated blast exposure influences the associ
39 at the time of conscription into the Swedish military (at 18 years of age).
40 nited Kingdom veterans from a broad range of military backgrounds and experience, we conducted a retr
41  and AFFF-impacted groundwaters from 15 U.S. military bases was conducted to identify the remaining P
42 n Iraq or Afghanistan who separated from the military between fiscal years 2001 and 2011 and subseque
43 n tissue integrity in individuals exposed to military blast forces will be an important future direct
44 eaks of febrile respiratory illness (FRI) in military boot camps and civilian cases of respiratory di
45 tions as highly transparent window coatings, military camouflage, and coatings for efficiently coupli
46  brain specimens from male civilian (ie, non-military) cases with no history of blast exposure, inclu
47 lysis of battlefield data examined 21,089 US military casualties that occurred during the Afghanistan
48               The PROWL-1 study was a single-military center study of 262 active-duty Navy personnel
49  of post-deployment PTSD symptoms in a Dutch military cohort (N=93; B=-0.054, t=-3.706, p-value=3.66
50 elopment of PTSD symptoms in two prospective military cohorts (one discovery and one replication data
51             Retrospective cohort study of US military combat casualties in Afghanistan between April
52                 Among medically evacuated US military combat causalities in Afghanistan, blood produc
53 stconcussion syndrome (PCS) are common among military combatants.
54 ured patient are perhaps the only benefit of military conflict.
55 uggest a need to identify and intervene with military-connected adolescents and reflect a larger conc
56  April 2013 and participants included 54,679 military-connected and 634,034 nonmilitary-connected sec
57 owever, results suggest that during wartime, military-connected youth are at increased risk for adver
58 administrative data set to determine whether military-connected youth are at risk for adverse outcome
59                                         Most military-connected youth demonstrate resilience.
60                        Military families and military-connected youth exhibit significant strengths;
61                                 For example, military-connected youth had 73% greater odds of recent
62 le logistic regression models indicated that military-connected youth had greater odds of substance u
63 lood pressure (n = 1555979) were measured at military conscription at a mean (SD) age of 18.3 (0.6) y
64 grades at age 16 years and IQ test scores at military conscription at age 18 years.
65 ed together with blood pressure at mandatory military conscription testing at a mean (SD) age of 18.2
66 grades at age 16 years and IQ test scores at military conscription.
67 elligence quotient (IQ) score at the time of military conscription; 137,574 had data on sibling birth
68  a longitudinal study of 50,373 Swedish male military conscripts (ages 18-19) who were followed in th
69 gitudinal cohort study enrolled Swedish male military conscripts aged 18 or 19 years from January 1,
70         In this large cohort of Swedish male military conscripts, low aerobic capacity and muscle str
71                                   First, the military considers a confluence of factors before determ
72 nctioning of male coalitionary behavior in a military context may run contrary to some of the argumen
73 tives become institutionally inverted within military contexts.
74 ion problems surrounding in-group defense in military contexts.
75 sociation studies of mental health in the US military contributed participants.
76                         We used the Stanford Military Data Repository, which contains comprehensive m
77    However, optimal management of HVI during military DCL remains controversial.
78  and currently account for almost 20% of all military deaths.
79           Inclusion criteria were PTSD after military deployment and stable medication therapy.
80                                              Military deployment can have profound effects on physica
81                                  The role of military deployment experiences and PTSD in coronary hea
82 tic brain injury (TBI), acted as the primary military deployment-related driver of PT/BRI symptoms.
83 posure (ie, natural disaster, terrorism, and military deployment; n = 5302 were screened, n = 4263 gi
84 de global exploration, adventure travel, and military deployments.
85 ight independent, self-selected academic and military dermatology and plastic surgery physicians with
86 eland and decreased mobility, as well as the military effectiveness of the Mongol cavalry, while desp
87                        Men were sampled from military enrollment records and women from electoral rec
88                                Recent global military events, such as the conflict and disarmament in
89  recent case of Jade Helm 15--where a simple military exercise turned out to be perceived as the begi
90                                   Those with military experience had greater odds of any difference i
91 ,5-triazine (RDX) is a common constituent of military explosives.
92 ing cleanup of contaminated coastal sites by military explosives.
93   Despite RDX contamination at numerous U.S. military facilities and its mobility to aquatic systems,
94                                              Military families and military-connected youth exhibit s
95 a larger concern regarding the well-being of military families during wartime.
96 dditional resources may be needed to support military families.
97 evaluated: vaccine reaction and newly issued military footwear (combat boots and boot socks).
98 aterials, such as Lamboglia 2 amphorae and a military footwear hobnail (type D of Alesia), indicate t
99             Alterations in the timing of the military footwear used and selected vaccine administrati
100 cks and running shoes rather than the issued military footwear.
101 d on data from a representative study of the military for UK regular personnel who had completed a qu
102 ers for applications like medical microbots, military hardware, and nanosatellite systems.
103 as political factors have influenced how the military has addressed the mental health needs resulting
104 sonnel and their dependents) treated at both military health care facilities and civilian trauma cent
105 ve trauma patients who were beneficiaries of Military Health Insurance (military personnel and their
106 c agents within the US Department of Defense Military Health System between April 1, 2013, and Decemb
107                    The Department of Defense Military Health System Data Repository was queried for i
108                          In the equal access military healthcare system, African Americans have outco
109 ivities relevant to the healthcare, fitness, military, healthcare and skin-care domains.
110 ent of Defense's Central Cancer Registry and Military Heath System medical claims databases.
111 mote fort literacy had spread throughout the military hierarchy, down to the quartermaster and probab
112 line questionnaires ascertained athletic and military history.
113 ed the efficacy of single-dose BPG in the US Military HIV Natural History Study.
114 ence that covers the entire environment of a military hospital with all departments.
115 eatures in soldiers hospitalized in 2 French military hospitals were also reviewed.
116 within the first year of separation from the military (HR 2.49, 95% CI 2.12-2.91), and remained high
117 tudies if more than 20% of participants were military, if they were of deminers, if they were from hi
118 study among 4,734 women who served in the US military in Vietnam (Vietnam cohort), 2,062 women who se
119 Infections Surveillance and Response System, Military Infectious Disease Research Program, National I
120                                              Military injury mechanisms dominated [44 gunshot wounds
121 included market workers at sites adjacent to military installations and workers at highway settlement
122 er ( P < .001) than those with US private or military insurance.
123 e draft-level genomic sequence of 50 diverse military isolates and conduct the largest bacterial pan-
124      For some individuals, enlistment in the military may be an instrumental act to escape adverse ho
125 rm risk that a group challenges the state by military means.
126             One of the unique aspects of the military medical care system that emerged during Operati
127 udy was approved by the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center institutional review board and i
128 udy was approved by the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center institutional review board and i
129 ransfusion capability after 2012 to deployed military medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) units enabled a co
130 nalyzed the original records of World War II military medical units housed in the National Archives a
131 01, to December 31, 2010, for the in-theater military medicine health system, including centers in Ir
132 ons to be learned from out-of-hospital care, military medicine, humanitarian medicine, and disaster m
133 a are a cause of potential concern for those military members who have deployed to the Gulf region in
134 ving in the Israeli military and examined in military mental health outpatient clinics across 72 cons
135  depression and later back pain among female military nurses.
136 e than two-thirds of women in the study were military nurses.
137  of previous unit suicide attempts varied by military occupational specialty (MOS) and unit size.
138 r influential groups within society, such as military officers, journalists, and business executives.
139 children from North Waziristan due to recent military operations was presumed to favor the widespread
140 of World War 1, but outbreaks still occur in military operations, and shigellosis causes hundreds of
141 connaissance facilitated World War II Allied military operations; analysts pored over stereoscopic ph
142 o other situations, such as cases in regular military organizations or in "terrorist" groups, where i
143    Evaluation of new respiratory symptoms in military personnel after service in Southwest Asia shoul
144  beneficiaries of Military Health Insurance (military personnel and their dependents) treated at both
145  a single dose may be particularly useful in military personnel and travelers and in the control of o
146 vidual and group psychotherapies for PTSD in military personnel and veterans, published from January
147  of warzone participation among contemporary military personnel and veterans.
148  disabling psychiatric disorder common among military personnel and veterans.
149 -connected disability that currently affects military personnel and veterans.
150 such as collision sport athletes and certain military personnel are of particular interest owing to t
151 ent from September 2012 to August 2014 of US military personnel at the Madigan Army Medical Center wh
152 etrospective multivariate analysis of all US military personnel between 2001 and 2011 (n=110 035 573
153 at accession among younger recently deployed military personnel born after 1965 was 0.98/1000 (95% co
154 y of hepatitis C viral (HCV) infection among military personnel can inform potential Department of De
155                                         1455 military personnel committed suicide from 2005 to 2011.
156                        Current and former US military personnel from all service branches participati
157 long-term course of readjustment problems in military personnel has not been evaluated in a nationall
158 se exposure, and suicide-related outcomes in military personnel have not been examined.
159    Survey of 8742 women who were active-duty military personnel in the US Armed Forces at any time fr
160 nce cultures and infection workups from U.S. military personnel injured during deployment (June 2009
161                               Data from U.S. military personnel injured in Afghanistan with IFI wound
162 use exposure and suicide-related outcomes in military personnel relative to civilians is unknown.
163 th many associations significantly weaker in military personnel relative to civilians.
164 ncreased hazard rate of death by suicide for military personnel varies by time since exposure to depl
165                   Approximately one-third of military personnel who deploy for combat operations sust
166 ospective cohort study of 891 active-duty US military personnel who developed C difficile from 1998 t
167  emotion dysregulation-is prevalent among US military personnel who have returned from Operations End
168 remain relevant to the trauma experienced by military personnel who have served in Iraq and Afghanist
169                                              Military personnel who report multiple TBIs have long-te
170 trajectories of PTSD symptoms among deployed military personnel with and without combat exposure, we
171 med a prospective, observational study of US military personnel with blast-related concussive traumat
172                                     Thus, US military personnel with concussive blast-related traumat
173 em and of concern to travelers and deploying military personnel with development and licensure of an
174 ective cohort study of critically injured US military personnel wounded in Iraq or Afghanistan from F
175 ines on management of mild TBI in civilians, military personnel, and athletes, but their widespread d
176 sports, elderly individuals, young children, military personnel, and victims of domestic violence.
177                         Certain groups, like military personnel, are at increased risk for SSTI devel
178 ated concussive traumatic brain injury in US military personnel, but the extent to which such adverse
179 etes and in the prevention of heat stroke in military personnel.
180 T) for the prevention of suicide attempts in military personnel.
181  dispatching 1200 workers, including Chinese military personnel.
182 talized; nursing home residents; active-duty military personnel; and people living on Indian reservat
183 of undiagnosed venous reflux disease and the military physical training environment in these cases re
184                                       French military physicians declared 328 P. ovale attacks over t
185 icians in the private sector vs salary-based military physicians) with the odds of procedural interve
186 6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) is a major worldwide military pollutant.
187 of causing mass destruction to a civilian or military population by inhalation of toxic bioaerosol.
188 iology and sequelae of C difficile in the US military population by using the US Department of Defens
189 sociated C difficile has increased in the US military population from 1998 through 2010.
190                                       In the military population, improving existing treatments such
191 nically relevant functional sequelae in this military population.
192                  Here, we use 50 distinct US military populations during 2009 as a retrospective coho
193  morbidities and mortalities in civilian and military populations.
194                 Tuberculosis was not a great military problem during World War 1, although mortality
195 e as a single agent is effective in treating military PTSD.
196 ,7-tetrazocine (HMX), are two most important military-purpose high explosives.
197 se of their development for geopolitical and military purposes.
198 ing, hence, will have a great impact on both military pyrotechnics and commercial firework sectors.
199 raw interest from the civilian fireworks and military pyrotechnics communities for further developmen
200 release of approximately 260 kg of PCBs by a military radar facility over a 30 year period (1970-2000
201 ase of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) by a military radar station into Saglek Bay, Labrador (Canada
202 press nfsI could be used to remediate TNT on military ranges, but this could require steps to mitigat
203  northern Australia climatic conditions on a military ration chocolate (RC).
204                Veterans were identified from military records and followed for 40 years through Decem
205 tes obtained from continuous surveillance of military recruit FRI, and 23 respiratory isolates recove
206       Respiratory adenovirus infection among military recruits is a serious problem, in some cases re
207  epidemics, most deaths among camp internees/military recruits were due to secondary bacterial pneumo
208 ldren, men who have sex with men, prisoners, military recruits, residents of long-term care facilitie
209 ) were again produced and administered to US military recruits.
210 dicted incident back pain in a population of military registered nurses when controlling for relevant
211  the highly repetitive nature of sports- and military-related head injury.
212  most frequently studied psychotherapies for military-related PTSD.
213  investigation builds on previous studies on military-relevant tungsten (W) to more thoroughly explor
214 arched contemporary publications, classified military reports, and casualty returns to reassess the c
215                     Achieving a tobacco-free military requires rethinking current perceptions of serv
216 iation study of PTSD to date, involving a US military sample, limited evidence of association for spe
217 ver, eating disorders remain understudied in military samples.
218 ttings and populations (e.g., the workplace, military, schools); (c) psychological and neurobiologica
219                                        Early military separation (<4 years) and discharge that is not
220 hysical and mental health outcomes following military separation.
221 wer prevalence than men without a history of military service (2.1% vs. 3.3%; P = .003).
222 e of suicide associated with separation from military service (hazard ratio, 1.63; 99% CI, 1.50-1.77)
223  Participants were categorized by history of military service and whether a respondent was 18 years o
224 sh men (mean age 5 18 years) conscripted for military service between 1969 and 1986.
225 gression models adjusted for demographic and military service characteristics, odds of experiencing h
226 measured at age 18-20 as part of the Swedish military service conscription examination.
227           In the all-volunteer era, men with military service had a higher prevalence of ACEs in all
228 old drug use, in which men with a history of military service had a significantly lower prevalence th
229  Notably, in the all-volunteer era, men with military service had twice the odds of reporting forced
230 ence of ACEs among persons with a history of military service has not been documented in the United S
231 7 and examined at age 18 years for universal military service in the Netherlands.
232     For each outcome, motivation internal to military service itself predicted positive outcomes; a r
233                        All participants were military service members or dependents recruited between
234     Participants were family members of U.S. military service members who died of any cause since Sep
235 es and markers, in brain specimens from male military service members with chronic blast exposures an
236         Considerable decline was observed in military service members with concussive blast TBI when
237 follow-up suicide attempts among active-duty military service members with current suicidal ideation
238 ctors with suicides among current and former military service members.
239 further investigation of eating disorders in military service members.
240  increase the risk of those conditions among military service members.
241 bers who separated with less than 4 years of military service or who did not separate with an honorab
242                                              Military service was also associated with ALS in 2 time
243                                   History of military service was defined by active duty service, vet
244    Suicides that occurred during active-duty military service were counted from June 1, 2001, through
245 eling (HR = 3.71, 95% CI: 1.44, 9.54) during military service were significant risks for suicide deat
246 ng global threats and the unique stresses of military service, are likely to be felt for years to com
247 oral assessment to determine eligibility for military service.
248 l examination to determine their fitness for military service.
249 suicides that occurred after separation from military service.
250 f ACEs in all 11 categories than men without military service.
251 95% CI, 1.34-3.57) compared with men without military service.
252 l examination to determine their fitness for military service.
253 In the first cohort consisting of male Dutch military servicemen (n=93), the emergence of PTSD sympto
254 ternational randomized control trial and the military setting.
255                                              Military sexual trauma (MST) is associated with adverse
256 ne if PTSD, other psychiatric disorders, and military sexual trauma exposure increased risk for autoi
257  disorders was similar in women and men, and military sexual trauma exposure was independently associ
258                                              Military sexual trauma screen status remained independen
259 highly persistent pollutant, particularly at military sites and former manufacturing facilities, pres
260  Repeated historical applications of AFFF at military sites were a result of fire-fighter training ex
261 and mobile groundwater contaminant common to military sites.
262 ion strategies to clean up TNT from polluted military sites.
263 es were obtained from various commercial and military sources around the country.
264 ws," restricting the manufacture and sale of military-style assault weapons and large-capacity magazi
265                       A pressing question in military suicide prevention research is whether deployme
266                                           US military suicides have increased substantially over the
267  to arterial repair occurring among American military surgeons in the last 6 months of the war in the
268                                       French military surveillance identified an increase in Plasmodi
269 ical intervention in the universally insured military system, versus the civilian setting in Californ
270 njury and loss of consciousness is common in military TBI.
271  methods were adapted predominantly from the military theater.
272                                              Military trainees are at increased risk for methicillin-
273 sis, we obtained anterior-naris samples from military trainees with cutaneous abscesses and from asym
274 es a new clinical condition identified in 55 military trainees.
275 and Ad7 vaccines in controlling FRI among US military trainees.
276 a- and interclass transmission of MRSA among military trainees.
277 TI or MRSA SSTI in a high-risk population of military trainees.
278  Hemorrhage is the leading cause of death in military trauma and second leading cause of death in civ
279 ries were rapidly translated to civilian and military trauma surgical practices and fundamentally cha
280 mes of abdominal injury in a mature deployed military trauma system, with particular focus on damage
281  posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) due to military trauma.
282 erlap between study years, combat zones, and military treatment facilities.
283 associated diarrhea, and a bane for deployed military troops.
284 nd limited use by selected industries (e.g., military uniform buttons and piano keys) and handicraft
285 ention programs have become ubiquitous among military units; identifying temporal trends and nonclini
286 ; and water-borne zinc naphthenate (ZN)] for military use are considered.
287 ent Health Questionnaire, the PTSD Checklist-Military Version for PTSD, and the Symptom Checklist-90
288  the Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist Military Version, and the Quick Inventory of Depressive
289                A retrospective cohort of 332 military veteran patients who underwent umbilical hernia
290             The sample consisted of 346 U.S. military veterans (89.3% male; 71.4% white) who deployed
291 te of major cardiovascular events among 1791 military veterans (median follow-up, 5.6 years).
292  to reassess PTSD in 598 service members and military veterans a median of 7.9 years (interquartile r
293  associated with unplanned readmission among military veterans following surgery.
294 lth toll of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars on military veterans has been considerable, yet little is k
295 based on a nationwide telephone survey of US military veterans sampled from the Veterans Hospital Pat
296                                       Recent military veterans with PTSD (n=20) and matched trauma-ex
297 nge of special sample populations (including military veterans, college fraternity/sorority members,
298 rael Defense Forces veterans and one in U.S. military veterans.
299 thers is a serious problem among a subset of military veterans.
300 ar-Vietnam cohort), and 5,313 nondeployed US military women (US cohort) to evaluate the associations

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