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1 dispatching 1200 workers, including Chinese military personnel.
2 ccupational morbidity among active-duty U.S. military personnel.
3 this study to include Reserve and separated military personnel.
4 etes and in the prevention of heat stroke in military personnel.
5 T) for the prevention of suicide attempts in military personnel.
6 oyment was associated with mental illness in military personnel.
7 iction-related disorders in active-duty U.S. military personnel.
8 ortant medical concern for active sports and military personnel.
9 t prevalence and higher frequency in wounded military personnel.
10 tance of continued health surveillance of UK military personnel.
11 for PTSD in female veterans and active-duty military personnel.
12 is the sole center for significant burns in military personnel.
13 ceased in 1972 for civilians and in 1990 for military personnel.
14 is of hospitalizations among all active-duty military personnel (16.4 million person-years) from 1990
15 ants were previously deployed active duty US military personnel (2002-2008) who had a recent archived
16 cal encounter data repository of active duty military personnel, a study was conducted to assess IBD
17 Evaluation of new respiratory symptoms in military personnel after service in Southwest Asia shoul
19 t in Amblyomma americanum ticks removed from military personnel and sent to the Tick-Borne Disease La
21 beneficiaries of Military Health Insurance (military personnel and their dependents) treated at both
24 a single dose may be particularly useful in military personnel and travelers and in the control of o
25 d LASIK is now a waiverable procedure for US military personnel and US Astronauts (excluding Naval av
26 vidual and group psychotherapies for PTSD in military personnel and veterans, published from January
31 ines on management of mild TBI in civilians, military personnel, and athletes, but their widespread d
32 sports, elderly individuals, young children, military personnel, and victims of domestic violence.
33 talized; nursing home residents; active-duty military personnel; and people living on Indian reservat
35 rticulate matter in Southwest Asia, deployed military personnel are at risk for developing acute and
36 such as collision sport athletes and certain military personnel are of particular interest owing to t
39 ent from September 2012 to August 2014 of US military personnel at the Madigan Army Medical Center wh
40 etrospective multivariate analysis of all US military personnel between 2001 and 2011 (n=110 035 573
41 at accession among younger recently deployed military personnel born after 1965 was 0.98/1000 (95% co
42 We made the hypothesis that outcomes for military personnel burned in the current conflict in Ira
43 ated concussive traumatic brain injury in US military personnel, but the extent to which such adverse
44 y of hepatitis C viral (HCV) infection among military personnel can inform potential Department of De
45 erential diagnosis of respiratory failure in military personnel can result in missing this syndrome a
47 ere 18 cases of AEP identified among 183,000 military personnel deployed in or near Iraq during the s
48 y rigorous epidemiological study on American military personnel deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan foun
52 k of serious coccidioidomycosis is low among military personnel during desert training exercises; how
53 ective cohort study involving active duty US Military personnel evacuated from Iraq or Afghanistan to
54 authors compared the postwar morbidity of US military personnel exposed to smoke from the 1991 Kuwait
58 2,139 (weighted 17.0%) of 12,359 male UK military personnel had a criminal record for any offence
60 long-term course of readjustment problems in military personnel has not been evaluated in a nationall
64 implemented smallpox vaccination of selected military personnel in a national program of preparedness
65 s in Iraq and Afghanistan have involved U.S. military personnel in major ground combat and hazardous
66 uch public debate about the proportion of ex-military personnel in the criminal justice system for vi
68 Survey of 8742 women who were active-duty military personnel in the US Armed Forces at any time fr
70 nce cultures and infection workups from U.S. military personnel injured during deployment (June 2009
72 ffer between civilians evacuated locally and military personnel injured in distant austere environmen
74 t that multiple TBIs, which are common among military personnel, may contribute to increased risk for
76 GI syndrome lethality for first responders, military personnel, or remediation workers entering a co
79 use exposure and suicide-related outcomes in military personnel relative to civilians is unknown.
81 l health problems on violent offending among military personnel relative to pre-existing risk factors
84 ng survey data, the authors assessed whether military personnel's prior mental health status would in
85 xperience and compared it with that of other military personnel serving at the same time who did not
86 ed serum samples were randomly selected from military personnel serving in 1997 and were tested for a
87 of the two signature injuries experienced by military personnel serving in Afghanistan and Iraq: post
88 se of morbidity and mortality among Peruvian military personnel stationed in the Amazon Basin region
89 SD and persistent postconcussive symptoms in military personnel strains the bounds of these construct
92 ired strains and from wild-type strains from military personnel that cause acute respiratory disease
93 he elevated staphylococcal carriage rates of military personnel undergoing basic training warrants a
96 ncreased hazard rate of death by suicide for military personnel varies by time since exposure to depl
101 1.90, 2.34) among nonvaccinated, active-duty military personnel, while the incidence of 2.07/100,000
104 d about the mental and physical health of UK military personnel who deployed to the 2003 war in Iraq
105 ospective cohort study of 891 active-duty US military personnel who developed C difficile from 1998 t
107 ical data were prospectively obtained for US military personnel who had been medically evacuated from
109 emotion dysregulation-is prevalent among US military personnel who have returned from Operations End
110 e-control study among more than 7 million US military personnel who have serum samples stored in the
111 remain relevant to the trauma experienced by military personnel who have served in Iraq and Afghanist
113 the rehabilitation program for head-injured military personnel who will be returned to duty, and mul
114 ls selected among the >8 million active-duty military personnel whose serum has been stored in the De
115 trajectories of PTSD symptoms among deployed military personnel with and without combat exposure, we
116 es and 368 matched controls from active-duty military personnel with archived serum in the US Departm
118 med a prospective, observational study of US military personnel with blast-related concussive traumat
120 em and of concern to travelers and deploying military personnel with development and licensure of an
123 randomly selected, serving and ex-serving UK military personnel with national criminal records stored
124 istant mutations was relatively high in U.S. military personnel with recently acquired HIV-1 infectio
125 sted case-control study among US active-duty military personnel with serum in the US Department of De
127 ective cohort study of critically injured US military personnel wounded in Iraq or Afghanistan from F
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