Surveillance Snapshot: Demographics of the Space Force Active Component, U.S. Armed Forces, November 2023

Image of 4Space28599. The U.S. Space Force was established in December 2019 to secure the United States’ interests in, from, and to outer space.

Click on the table to access a 508-compliant PDF versionThis Surveillance Snapshot provides the first summary of the demographic composition of active component Space Force service members, as of November 2023. This Snapshot is intended to inform future MSMR illness and injury surveillance reports about this population.

The U.S. Space Force was established in December 2019 to secure the United States’ interests in, from, and to outer space.1 The Space Force is a separate and distinct branch of the armed services, although it is organized under the Department of the Air Force. The Space Force provides space capabilities to the joint forces by managing space launch operations and maintaining a global satellite surveillance network that provides in-theater secure communications, as well as weather and navigation information, for military operations, in addition to threat warning.

The Armed Forces Health Surveillance Division began receiving personnel and demographic information about Space Force members from the Defense Manpower Data Center in 2023. As of November 2023, there were 8,938 active component members of the U.S. Space Force (Table). The majority were male (81.1%), non-Hispanic White (62.3%), and possessed a bachelor’s degree or higher (57.9%). The largest proportion of service members within 5-year age categories were classified as 25-29 years (23.8%) and 30-34 years (21.1%). There was a roughly even proportion of junior officers (25.9%) and senior officers (23.5%), while there were more senior enlisted (29.7%) than junior enlisted (20.9%) members.

The Space Force bases with the highest percentages of active component Space Force members assigned were Schriever SFB, CO (18.7%), Peterson SFB, CO (15.6%), Vandenberg SFB, CA (9.4%), Buckley SFB, CO (8.4%), and Los Angeles SFB, CA (7.4%). Roughly half of the 8,938 Space Force members were missing an occupation code as of November 2023. Of those with a valid occupation code, the most common occupations were Operations Staff Officers (42.3%) and Procurement and Production Officers (18.2%) (data not shown).

Active component Space Force members are demographically similar to other active component service members: The majority are males and non-Hispanic White.2 The data presented in this report suggest, however, that Space Force members are, on average, older and more highly educated than the overall active component.2 In 2022, 34.2% of all ACSM were aged 24 years or younger and 34.9% held a bachelor’s degree or higher, compared to 21.3% of Space Force members aged 24 years or younger and 57.9% with a bachelor’s degree or higher. These findings may be used to help interpret future MSMR illness and injury surveillance reports on the Space Force.

References

  1. United States Space Force. About the Space Force. Accessed Jan. 19, 2024. https://www.spaceforce.mil/About-Us/About-Space-Force
  2. McQuistan AA, Dreyer E, Mabila SL. Surveillance snapshot: mid-year populations by sex, age, and race and ethnicity of active component service members of the U.S. Armed Forces, 2018–2022. MSMR. 2023;30(12):12. https://www.health.mil/News/Articles/2023/12/01/MSMR-MidYear-Populations

You also may be interested in...

Article
Feb 1, 2025

Development of a New Fleet Disease and Injury Surveillance Capability Using ESSENCE

This report details the steps taken to develop a timely, accurate, and comprehensive Navy fleet disease and injury surveillance capability, utilizing ESSENCE (Electronic Surveillance System for the Early Notification of Community-based Epidemics), including the successes and challenges that will guide further refinement and expansion of this tool.

Article
Feb 1, 2025

Surveillance Snapshot: Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Incidence in Active Component U.S. Service Members, 2017–2023

This analysis utilizes an updated case definition for non-Hodgkin lymphoma developed by the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Division, based on consultation with subject matter experts and previous literature, to establish non-Hodgkin lymphoma incidence within the U.S. Armed Forces active component, from 2017 through 2023.

Article
Feb 1, 2025

External Cause Coding of Injury Encounters in the Military Health System Among Active Component U.S. Service Members, 2016–2019

Knowledge of injury causes is essential for prevention. This article describes causes of injury for all U.S. service members, from 2016 through 2019, and identifies variations in injury cause coding over time, and by branch of military service, type of health care visit and facility, and diagnosis category.

Article
Jan 1, 2025

Use of Positive Predictive Value to Evaluate the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Division Brain Cancer Incidence Rules, Active Component Department of the Air Force Pediatric Dependent Population, January 1, 2010–December 31, 2020

This study applied the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Division (AFHSD) case definition for the identification of malignant brain tumors among U.S. active service members to the dependent pediatric population of the active component of the U.S. Air Force, to determine the positive predictive value of this case definition for a pediatric population.

Article
Dec 1, 2024

Syphilis Cases Among Pregnant Women and Newborns in the Military Health System, 2012–2022

This report presents the rates of maternal syphilis among pregnant women and congenital syphilis among newborns in the Military Health System beneficiary population from 2012 to 2022. Between 2012 and 2021, cases of congenial syphilis in the U.S. increased by 755%, and rates of maternal and congenital syphilis within the Military Health System ...

Article
Dec 1, 2024

Post-Acute Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 and Kidney Events in U.S. Active Component Service Members, March 1, 2020–September 30, 2022

This study assessed the incidence and incidence rate ratio of selected kidney events among U.S. active component service members that occurred from 31 days to six months after a COVID-19 test. Early evidence suggests that COVID-19 is linked to kidney-related events in older and hospitalized patients but has not been examined among a younger, healthy ...

Refine your search