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Psychological Model of Military Aggressive Behavior
Findings From Population-Based Surveys
Hourani, L., Williams, J., Lattimore, P., Trudeau, J., & Van Dorn, R. (2017). Psychological Model of Military Aggressive Behavior: Findings From Population-Based Surveys. Military Psychology, (5). https://doi.org/10.1037/mil0000172
The U.S. military has expressed concern about the influence of deployment and combat exposure on the criminal behavior of personnel returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. This study examines the role of behavioral health risk and protective factors associated with combat exposure and criminal and aggressive behavior in active duty Army and Naval personnel. Data from this cross-sectional study are based on two large anonymous, population-based health-related behavior surveys. Findings show that the proportion of all active duty Army and Naval service personnel who reported encounters with law enforcement or committed one or more aggressive acts in the past year increased from 19.41% in 2005 to 22.58% in 2008. Substance use, especially illicit drug use, and mental health problems were significant correlates of criminal and aggressive behavior, as were younger age, male sex, high impulsivity, and work/family stress. Path modeling suggested that several variables, notably combat exposure and history of childhood abuse, appeared to manifest their influence on criminal or aggressive behavior through increases in substance use and mental health problems. The potential mediating influence of substance use and mental health on combat and other trauma experiences has significant implications for preventing criminal and aggressive behavior among U.S. active duty military personnel.
What is the public significance of this article?
This large epidemiologic study provides prevalence estimates and risk factors for aggressive behaviors and encounters with law enforcement among Army and Naval service active duty personnel. Findings show that criminal/aggressive behaviors are associated with illicit drug use and impulsivity and suggest that combat exposure is associated with criminal/aggression behavior through its effect on mental health and substance abuse problems.