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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Nov 1.
Published in final edited form as: Psychosomatics. 2015 Jul 29;56(6):674–684. doi: 10.1016/j.psym.2015.07.010

TABLE 2.

Demographic and Military Information for Participants (N = 1030)

Variable M SD
Age (in y)* 38.63 9.77
Combat sum 4.12 4.02
PCL score 30.48 15.87
n %
Sex
  Male 851 82.6
  Female 176 17.1
  Missing data 3 0.3
Race
  American Indian/Alaskan Native 10 1.0
  Asian 20 1.9
  Black or African American 165 16.0
  Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 7 0.7
  White 737 71.6
  Other 48 4.7
  Missing data 43 4.2
Marital status
  Single, never married 154 15.0
  Married 689 66.9
  Committed/living as married 33 3.2
  Separated 38 3.7
  Divorced 101 9.8
  Widowed 3 0.3
  Missing data 12 1.2
Employment status§
  Active duty military 120 11.7
  Employed full-time as a civilian 647 62.8
  Employed part-time as a civilian 51 5.0
  Unemployed 122 11.8
  Retired 120 11.7
  Disabled 48 4.7
  Homemaker 37 3.6
  Student 117 11.4
  Missing data 4 0.4
Number of deployments
  1 592 57.5
  2 291 28.3
  3 77 7.5
  4 or more 62 6.0
  Missing data 8 0.8
Component
  Active duty 632 61.4
  Reserves 186 18.1
  National guard 188 18.3
  Missing data 24 2.3
Branch
  Army 498 48.3
  Air force 148 14.4
  Coast guard 1 0.1
  Navy 224 21.7
  Marines 139 13.5
  Missing data 20 1.9
Highest rank
  E1–E4 216 21.0
  E5–E7 437 42.4
  E8 or higher 104 10.1
  O1–O3 111 10.8
  O4 or higher 154 15.0
  Missing data 8 0.8
Service-connected injury
  Yes 367 35.6
  No 639 62.0
  Missing data 24 2.3
Positive depression screening
  Yes 177 17.2
  No 853 82.8

M = mean; SD = standard deviation.

*

Age was missing for 5 participants.

Combat sum was missing for 19 participants.

PCL raw score (i.e., before transformation to z-score).

§

Participants could select multiple responses to this question.