Latent classes based on clinical symptoms of military recruits with mental health issues and their clinical responses to treatment over 12 months
D.-I. Jon, J. Eo, E. H. Park, H. J. Hong

TL;DR
This study examines how different groups of South Korean military recruits with mental health issues respond to treatment over 12 months.
Contribution
The study extends a prior analysis by evaluating long-term treatment outcomes for three subgroups of recruits.
Findings
Class 1 and 2 showed significant improvement in the first 6 months but no further progress during the follow-up.
Class 3 showed continued improvement over the 12-month period despite initial lack of progress.
A significant portion of participants stopped visiting the hospital during the follow-up period.
Abstract
In South Korea, all men at the age of 18 or older are required to serve at military for a certain period as an obligation. These recruits should be able to withstand psychological stress and pressures of rapid adaptation of the unique and new environment in military. The number of military recruits facing adaptation issues has been on the rise, necessitating an evaluation for active service. In our previous study (Park et al., in press 2023), we classified the military recruits with mental issues according to latent profile analysis (LPA) and examined the treatment response during six months. In this study, we further examined clinical characteristics over the next six months. Ninety-two participants were analyzed with LPA using MMPI-2 clinical profiles in the previous study. The three classes were identified: mild maladjustment (Class 1, n=14), neurotic depression and anxiety (Class…
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Taxonomy
TopicsResilience and Mental Health · Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Research
