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Psychosomatic Medicine 34:533-547 (1972)
© 1972 American Psychosomatic Society

Life Stress and Illness Patterns in the US Navy

VI. Environmental, Demographic, and Prior Life Change Variables in Relation to Illness Onset in Naval Aviators During A Combat Cruise

ROBERT T. RUBIN MD1, E. K. E. GUNDERSON PhD1, and RANSOM J. ARTHUR MC, USN1

1 Department of Psychiatry, Pennsylvania State University School of Medicine, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, Pennsylvania and Navy Medical Neuropsychiatric Research Unit, San Diego, California

Address for reprint requests: Robert T. Rubin, MD, B-4 Neurology Laboratory, Harbor General Hospital, Torrance, Calif 90509

Patterns of illness occurrence were examined in naval aviators flying combat missions from an aircraft carrier during a 6-month deployment to Vietnam. Demographic and symptom questionnaires were administered at the beginning of the cruise, and the cruise activities, work assignments and the illnesses developed by the aviators during the cruise were tabulated.

The mean illness rate varied with operational conditions and personnel characteristics. Higher illness rates occurred in younger age groups and among those more preoccupied with their health. The findings parallel those for several ships' enlisted crews, from whom the aviators differed along several demographic dimensions. The civilian scoring system for the Schedule of Recent Experience, measuring recent life change, was effective in discriminating future illness in this officer sample.

Submitted on April 9, 1971
Revised on March 17, 1972







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Copyright © 1972 by the American Psychosomatic Society