There are 2.1 million current military servicemembers and 21 million living veterans in the United States. Although they were healthier upon entering military service compared to the general U.S. population, in the longer term veterans tend to be of equivalent or worse health than civilians. One primary explanation for the veterans' health disparity is poorer health behaviors during or after military service, especially areas of physical activity, nutrition, tobacco, and alcohol. In response, the Department of Defense and Department of Veterans Affairs continue to develop, evaluate, and improve health promotion programs and healthcare services for military and veteran health behavior in an integrated approach. Future research and practice is needed to better understand and promote positive health behavior during key transition periods in the military and veteran life course. Also paramount is implementation and evaluation of existing interventions, programs, and policies across the population using an integrated and person centered approach.
Among service members who had a clinical mental health encounter, prior deployment was not associated with career-impacting recommendations and prior mental health treatment appeared to be protective against career-impacting recommendations. These results are in line with research indicating that service members who have previous experience with mental health care tend to seek help sooner than those without prior treatment. Those service members who had previously sought care were more likely to express decreased stigma and seek mental health care while deployed. Consequently, service members who have prior mental health treatment may seek care before their concerns become marked enough to warrant duty-limiting recommendations to command. These findings have important implications for campaigns to reduce stigma and promote early help-seeking among service members. Efforts should continue to study and respectively make known the rates of career impact with the goal of increased early service utilization and increased ability to sustain service members' military readiness and personal functioning.
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