Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Cache

Health.mil has undergone a recent update. For the best user experience we recommend clearing your browser cache.

Injury Investigations of Unique Military Populations Enhance Force Strength

Image of Injury Investigations of Unique Military Populations Enhance Force Strength. According to U.S. Defense Health Agency-Public Health experts, noncombat-related injuries are the primary reason active duty service members seek medical treatment. Department of Defense active duty service members require medical treatment for injuries almost 5 million times each year. In addition to causing pain, injuries often lead to physical restrictions and medical profiles. As a result, injuries degrade force readiness through millions of lost duty and training days and billions of dollars annually.

According to U.S. Defense Health Agency-Public Health experts, noncombat-related injuries are the primary reason active duty service members seek medical treatment.

Department of Defense active duty service members require medical treatment for injuries almost 5 million times each year. In addition to causing pain, injuries often lead to physical restrictions and medical profiles. As a result, injuries degrade force readiness through millions of lost duty and training days and billions of dollars annually.

How Do We Know the Extent of the DOD Injury Problem?

To identify reasons for medical visits, military health experts routinely monitor the medical data of all service members, an essential public health service also referred to as health surveillance. Surveillance allows the military to monitor health care use and trends over time and in useful groups, such as at the installation level. For example, across all services, there are more than twice as many medical visits for injury as for behavioral and mental health, the second-most common reason for visits.

The DOD’s routine surveillance provides insights to the nature of the injury visits as well as evidence to support strategic injury reduction priorities. Surveillance, however, is not always adequate to identify the unique types of injuries, injury patterns, hazards, exposures, or characteristics of individual units.

Commanders and public health personnel may need additional targeted injury investigations to identify risk factors for specific groups.

What Are Injury Investigations?

“Injury investigations require our experts to go beyond the medical records used for routine surveillance,” said Michelle Chervak, chief of the military injury prevention division of DHA-PH in Aberdeen, Maryland. “Additional information pertaining to a specific type of injury in a ‘sub-population,’ or unit of interest, is collected using a variety of techniques, including questionnaires, focus groups or interviews, and in-depth reviews of recent scientific publications.”

A variety of units benefit from the extensive specialized assessment. In addition to the investigations mentioned below, other examples of military unit sub-populations that have been investigated include military police, infantry units, U.S. Army wheeled vehicle mechanics, hospital medical staff, a chemical brigade, and even military working dogs.

“During investigations, we gather information about a unit’s specific mission and training schedule,” said Chervak. “Some characteristics, such as higher body fat and lower aerobic fitness, tend to be associated with musculoskeletal injury risk for all military members. Risks that may be specific to this population include occupational demands, training requirements, and health behaviors such as tobacco use, sleep, and nutrition. These details are not always available in medical records or other centralized data sources.”

Injury investigations involve comprehensive data collection and statistical analyses that can take time to complete, but interim findings can often be provided at multiple stages.

The following are examples of recent and ongoing investigations.

MSK Injuries Among U.S. Military Paratroopers, 2019 and 2023

Changes in tactical paratrooper procedures, most notably the implementation of a new parachute known as the T-11 after 2015, resulted in a two-phase investigation of paratrooper injuries.

The first phase focused on a comprehensive review of the available literature. The second phase compared medical injury data of active paratroopers with groups of peers who did not parachute.

“We realized that many past studies had been performed on service members who were in training, or ’jump school,’” says Chervak. “So we identified different patterns of injuries and risk variation between the trainees and those who went on to become active paratroopers in a military unit.”

The comparison with nonparatroopers also provided a new understanding of injury risks among U.S. military paratroopers.

“Most injuries experienced by paratroopers were overuse injuries, which is similar to nonparatroopers,” said Chervak. “While findings showed paratroopers do experience a slightly higher risk of acute traumatic injuries, there appear to be fewer ankle fractures and sprains than in past studies. We also found that paratroopers appear to experience slightly more shoulder-related injuries than their nonparatrooper peers.”

The DHA has summarized the current evidence in a factsheet.

Musculoskeletal Injuries Among U.S. Army Band Members, 2023

“We conducted an investigation of members of the Army Band at the request of their command, who felt band members may have different musculoskeletal, or MSK, injuries than other Army populations given the units’ older average age and unique occupational activities,” said Anna Renner, a safety engineer and senior injury prevention investigator at DHA-PH in Aberdeen, Maryland. “Extended sitting, standing, and marching for rehearsals and performances; awkward postures while playing instruments; and carrying heavy instruments or equipment are all unique risk factors for MSK injuries among musicians.”

Data on these risk factors were collected using an electronic self-reported questionnaire. Common factors such as body mass index and fitness levels were assessed against self-reported injuries

“Based on our findings, we recommended increased physical training, additional rest breaks during rehearsals, and ergonomic assessments to ensure proper postures are maintained,” said Renner.

Hearing Injuries Among Special Operations Forces, Ongoing

While all service members are at risk for experiencing auditory damage, the risks of hearing-related injury are considered especially high for those in special operations forces, or SOF, due to noise exposure from firing weapons. A military public health investigation is underway to assess SOF hearing risk.

“The SOF personnel likely have greater risk of hearing damage than those of a typical soldier because they are trained on a wider variety of heavy weapon systems, use weapons more regularly in training, and remain in a front-line combat role longer than other service members,” said Alyssa Davidson, a research audiologist with Walter Reed National Military Medical Center supporting the DHA’s investigation.

Davidson explains the investigation allows audiologists to evaluate hearing and auditory function of SOF service members before, during and after training exercises to identify any acute changes in hearing function.

“We will compare any hearing changes to the exposure data collected with minimally-invasive blast dosimeters and boothless audiometers,” said Davidson.

When complete, the study findings will assist SOF leaders with recommendations to reduce risks of hearing impairment among their units. The same type of evaluation can be extended to other units.

“Now that we have an established protocol, we are interested in working with other units concerned about noise and blast exposure in their trainings,” said Davidson.

Like the other injury investigations, this study is evaluating exposures that cause hearing- related injuries and hearing loss. The noise and blast exposure data being collected for this study may also have even broader implications and help inform the Warfighter Brain Health initiative to counter blast overpressure risk

Learn More

As evidenced by these examples, injury prevention investigations can assist local leaders in developing injury prevention strategies in their unique populations.

Local leaders and public health personnel with concerns about their unit’s injuries and risks can reach out to the military’s public health injury specialists and by filling in basic contact and topic information as a Defense Centers for Public Health-Aberdeen mission request.

The Defense Health Agency supports our Nation by improving health and building readiness—making extraordinary experiences ordinary and exceptional outcomes routine.

NOTE: The mention of any non-federal entity and/or its products is for informational purposes only, and is not to be construed or interpreted, in any manner, as federal endorsement of that non-federal entity or its products.

You also may be interested in...

Fact Sheet
Jan 9, 2024

Hearing Protector Fit-Testing Requirement in the Department of Defense

.PDF | 331.11 KB

Significant updates to the Department of Defense Instruction (DoDI) 6055.12 “Hearing Conservation Program” are expected to be published in April 2023. The significant change is a new requirement for initial hearing protector fit-testing to be conducted for all DOD personnel who have documented noise exposure greater than or equal to 95 dBA 8-hour time ...

Article
Dec 28, 2023

Making Feats for the Feet with Naval Hospital Bremerton’s Podiatrist

U.S. Navy Lt. Edee Renier, staff podiatrist assigned to Naval Hospital Bremerton’s  Orthopedic department shares her expertise in handling foot and ankle specific medical conditions, such as ankle sprains, strains, and fractures.  (Photo by Douglas H Stutz, Naval Hospital Bremerton public affairs officer)

When it comes to healing heels, such feats for the feet are the specialty of Naval Hospital Bremerton’s foot doctor. U.S. Navy Lt. Edee Renier, staff podiatrist assigned to NHB’s Orthopedic department, is helping U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps personnel keep operational ready and able to stand on their own two feet.

Article
Oct 4, 2023

Stemming the Tide: Navy Medicine and the Egyptian Cholera Epidemic of 1947

Over three months, cholera spread across 2,270 towns and villages in Egypt killing over half of its victims. According to one estimate over 20,000 Egyptians died of cholera. (Graphic by Andre Sobocinski)

On September 21, 1947, a man was admitted to the Al-Qurayn (El Korein) Hospital in Egypt vomiting profusely and suffering severe diarrhea. Within hours, he was dead. The attending physician on duty first suspected food poisoning before 11 additional patients were admitted with identical symptoms. Their diagnosis was cholera, a deadly bacterial disease ...

Article
Sep 29, 2023

Real Life Falls Are Not a Laughing Matter: Protect your Body, Ego

Each year thousands of military personnel injure themselves because of falls from vehicles and equipment, tripping over objects, and slipping on hazardous surfaces like ice, snow, or water. Injuries include lacerations requiring stitches, concussions or head injury, sprained ankles, wrists or hands, and broken bones. These often require ER visits and can result in temporary disability and lost duty time for many days or even months. (Defense Centers for Public Health-Aberdeen graphic illustration by Joyce Kopatch)

Cartoons typically portray slips or falls as comical accidents. But falls are no laughing matter. Falls often cause injuries that require emergency room visits for injuries such as lacerations requiring stitches, concussions or head injury, sprained ankles, wrists or hands, or broken bones. Learn how to prevent fall-related injuries.

Article
Sep 28, 2023

Nebraska Air National Guard State Surgeon’s Path Leads Him to Professional Boxing’s Highest Pinnacle

Nebraska Air National Guard Col. (Dr.) Mark Shirley takes in a practice at Mick Doyle’s Kickboxing and Fitness Center in Omaha, Nebraska, on Oct. 10, 2022. A member of the Nebraska Air National Guard where he serves as the state surgeon, Shirley is also a doctor of osteopathic medicine and a member of the emergency department staff of the Memorial Community Hospital and Health System in Blair, Nebraska. (Photo: U.S. Air Force National Guard Lt. Col. Kevin Hynes)

Dressed in surgical scrubs, Nebraska Air National Guard Col. Mark Shirley looks like any other medical doctor pulling a 24-hour emergency department shift. Shirley serves as the state air surgeon where he oversees the medical support required to keep the Nebraska Air Guard’s approximately 1,000 airmen ready to support any and every federal or state ...

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: February 25, 2025
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Subscribe to updates from the MHS