MILITARY MEDICINE, 185, 7/8:e1247, 2020
Identifying Risk and Resilience Factors Associated With the
Likelihood of Seeking Mental Health Care Among U.S. Army
Soldiers-in-Training
SSgt James M. Duncan , USAF (Hon. Dis.), PhD, CFLE, DAV* ; Kayla Reed-Fitzke, PhD, LMFT† ;
Anthony J. Ferraro, PhD, CFLE‡ ; Armeda S. Wojciak, PhD, LMFT† ; Kevin M. Smith, MS, LMFT† ;
Jennifer Sánchez, PhD, CRC, LMHC†
ABSTRACT
Introduction
The Department of Defense aims to maintain mission readiness of its service members. Therefore, it is important to
understand factors associated with treatment seeking in order to identify areas of prevention and intervention early in a
soldier’s career that can promote positive functioning and increase their likelihood of seeking mental health care when
necessary.
Method
Using a theory of planned behavior lens, this study identified potential barriers (risk) and facilitators (resilience) to
treatment seeking among 24,717 soldiers-in-training who participated in the New Soldiers Study component of the “Army
Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers” (Army STARRS). Approval for this study was granted by the
University of Iowa IRB # 201706739. Hierarchal linear regression modeling and independent samples t-tests were used
to examine associations between demographics and study variables, intersections of risk and resilience, and to explore
differences in the likelihood of seeking help based on mental health diagnoses.
Results
A four-stage hierarchical linear regression was conducted, using likelihood of help-seeking as the dependent variable, to
identify the most salient factors related to help-seeking. “Step one” of the analysis revealed soldiers-in-training who
identified as female, Hispanic or Other ethnicity, and married, divorced, or separated reported a greater likelihood
of seeking help. “Step two” of the analysis indicated soldiers-in-training with a history of sexual trauma, experience
of impaired parenting, and clinical levels of mental health symptomatology (anxiety, depression, PTSD) reported a
greater likelihood of seeking help. Inversely, soldiers-in-training with a history of emotional trauma and parental
absence/separation reported a lower likelihood of seeking help. “Step three” of the analysis demonstrated soldiers-in-
training with a prior history of seeking help and larger social networks had a greater likelihood of seeking help. “Step four”
of the analysis revealed several interactive effects between risk and resilience factors. Specifically, soldiers-in-training
who reported greater depressive symptomatology in combination with prior history of treatment seeking reported a greater
likelihood of help seeking, whereas soldiers-in-training who reported prior sexual trauma and PTSD in combination with
large social networks reported a lower likelihood of seeking help. Finally, a greater percentage of soldiers-in-training
with clinical levels of anxiety, depression, and PTSD indicated they would likely seek help in comparison to soldiers-in-
training without clinical symptoms.
Conclusion
Findings suggest few soldiers-in-training are likely to seek help when experiencing a problem. General efforts to
encourage help-seeking when needed are warranted with particular focus on subsets of soldiers-in-training (eg, men,
those with a history of some adverse childhood experiences). Strengths of this study include the examination of a large
sample of soldiers-in-training to identify possible leverage points for early intervention or prevention prior to entering
stressful military operating environments. Limitations of this study include the examination of only one military branch
and exclusion of soldiers not “in-training.” Future studies could consider replicating the current study using a sample of
military personnel longitudinally to track behavioral trends as well as looking at military populations outside of basic
combat training.
*
Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences, The
University of Arkansas, 118 Human Environmental Sciences Building, 987
W. Maple St., Fayetteville, AR 72701
†
College of Education, The University of Iowa, 361 Lindquist Center, 240
South Madison Street, Iowa City, IA 52242
‡
College of Health & Human Sciences, The Kansas State University, 312
Justin Hall, 1324 Lovers Lane Manhattan, KS 66506
doi:10.1093/milmed/usz483
© Association of Military Surgeons of the United States 2020. All rights
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MILITARY MEDICINE, Vol. 185, July/August 2020 e1247
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