Using self-report surveys at the beginning of service to develop multi-outcome risk models for new soldiers in the U.S. Army

A. J. Rosellini, M. B. Stein, D. M. Benedek, P. D. Bliese, W. T. Chiu, I. Hwang, J. Monahan, M. K. Nock, M. V. Petukhova, N. A. Sampson, A. E. Street, A. M. Zaslavsky, R. J. Ursano, R. C. Kessler*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background The U.S. Army uses universal preventives interventions for several negative outcomes (e.g. suicide, violence, sexual assault) with especially high risks in the early years of service. More intensive interventions exist, but would be cost-effective only if targeted at high-risk soldiers. We report results of efforts to develop models for such targeting from self-report surveys administered at the beginning of Army service. Methods 21 832 new soldiers completed a self-administered questionnaire (SAQ) in 2011-2012 and consented to link administrative data to SAQ responses. Penalized regression models were developed for 12 administratively-recorded outcomes occurring by December 2013: suicide attempt, mental hospitalization, positive drug test, traumatic brain injury (TBI), other severe injury, several types of violence perpetration and victimization, demotion, and attrition. Results The best-performing models were for TBI (AUC = 0.80), major physical violence perpetration (AUC = 0.78), sexual assault perpetration (AUC = 0.78), and suicide attempt (AUC = 0.74). Although predicted risk scores were significantly correlated across outcomes, prediction was not improved by including risk scores for other outcomes in models. Of particular note: 40.5% of suicide attempts occurred among the 10% of new soldiers with highest predicted risk, 57.2% of male sexual assault perpetrations among the 15% with highest predicted risk, and 35.5% of female sexual assault victimizations among the 10% with highest predicted risk. Conclusions Data collected at the beginning of service in self-report surveys could be used to develop risk models that define small proportions of new soldiers accounting for high proportions of negative outcomes over the first few years of service.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2275-2287
Number of pages13
JournalPsychological Medicine
Volume47
Issue number13
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Oct 2017

Keywords

  • Army
  • disciplinary problems
  • mental health
  • military
  • predictive modeling
  • risk assessment
  • violence

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