“…An extension of this approach would be to use administrative records and comprehensive risk factor surveys prior to deployment to develop actuarial models to predict risk of mental disorders, suicidality, and interpersonal violence during deployment. Models of this sort have been developed successfully to define small groups of female soldiers at high risk of sexual assault victimization (Street et al, 2016), male soldiers at high risk of physical violence perpetration (Rosellini et al, 2017), and soldiers in treatment who are at high risk of suicide (Kessler et al, 2017; Kessler et al, 2015). If similar models based on pre-deployment data could be developed to predict negative outcomes during deployment, results could be used to target soldiers judged to be high risk for various outcomes for diverse preventive interventions either prior to deployment (e.g., a multi-session cognitive-behavioral program for depression/anxiety, Buntrock et al, 2016; Topper, Emmelkamp, Watkins, & Ehring, 2017; anger management, Shea, Lambert, & Reddy, 2013) or during deployment (e.g., assigning a battle buddy).…”