Predictors of change in substance abuse status in soldiers

Joint Authors

Mehrazmay, Ali Rida
Karambakhsh, Ali Rida
Salesi, Muhammad
Haydari, Mustafa
Ahmadi, Khodabakhsh

Source

Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal

Issue

Vol. 17, Issue 9 (30 Sep. 2015), pp.1-7, 7 p.

Publisher

Iranian Hospital

Publication Date

2015-09-30

Country of Publication

United Arab Emirates

No. of Pages

7

Main Subjects

Medicine

Topics

Abstract EN

Background : Military service is a stressful task that influences the life style of army personnel.

Several factors can make soldiers less capable of coping with stressful events; so they may try to start drug abuse or increase in the amount or diversity of substance abuse.

Understanding factors responsible for this misbehavior among soldiers is crucial for their commanders to modify these factors.

Objectives : This study aimed to determine the predictors of change in substance abuse status in soldiers.

Patients and Methods: This cross-sectional research was conducted to evaluate the substance abuse status among Iranian soldiers in 2010.

The target population was the soldiers who had spent at least 3 months of their military service.

Cluster sampling was done from army service garrisons in 12 provinces in Iran.

A total of 3960 soldiers were selected with different levels of education and age.

Data gathering was done with demographic questionnaires, Texas Christian university (TCU) drug screen II and ASI questionnaire (fifth edition).

Four types of dependent variables were defined: “improvement”, “without change”, “deterioration”, and “severe deterioration”.

Backward ordinal regression analysis was done and P values, OR, and SE were calculated by SPSS19 software.

Results : Totally, 6.7% of soldiers improved, 82% remained without change, 6.1% deteriorated, and 5.2% severely deteriorated with regard to their substance abuse.

Modifiable predictors were distance from home lower than 200 km (OR =1.54), bad relationship with commanders (OR = 1.88), service place dissatisfaction (OR = 1.39), and always feeling lonely (OR = 1.83).

Non-modifiable factors were alcohol use within family and friends (P = 0.000); psychiatric drug use history (OR = 1.72); suicidal attempt history (OR = 1.31); divorce, separation, and extramarital contact (P = 0.001); unemployment (P = 0.019); leisure time dissatisfaction (P = 0.004); living alone (OR = 2.43); and substance abuse onset before age 15 (OR = 1.71).

Conclusions : Considering non-modifiable risk factors, leaders and commanders may recognize more vulnerable soldiers and try to resolve modifiable factors and decrease the risk of getting worse (with respect to substance abuse) about 7.3 times.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Mehrazmay, Ali Rida& Karambakhsh, Ali Rida& Salesi, Muhammad& Haydari, Mustafa& Ahmadi, Khodabakhsh. 2015. Predictors of change in substance abuse status in soldiers. Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal،Vol. 17, no. 9, pp.1-7.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-618464

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Mehrazmay, Ali Rida…[et al.]. Predictors of change in substance abuse status in soldiers. Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal Vol. 17, no. 9 (Sep. 2015), pp.1-7.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-618464

American Medical Association (AMA)

Mehrazmay, Ali Rida& Karambakhsh, Ali Rida& Salesi, Muhammad& Haydari, Mustafa& Ahmadi, Khodabakhsh. Predictors of change in substance abuse status in soldiers. Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal. 2015. Vol. 17, no. 9, pp.1-7.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-618464

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 6-7

Record ID

BIM-618464