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Author
Corporate Author
Report/Article TltlB

RTI Gets

JOIirnal/BOQk Title

Occupational Health &amp; Safety Letter

Year

1984

Month/Day

October a

Color
Number of Images

Veterans

$3-6 Million to Study Adjustment of Vietnam

n

2

Descrlpton Notes

Monday, June 11, 2001

Page 1733 of 1793

�•6

Occupational Health &amp; Safety Letter, October 8, 1984

LOCKHEED REQUIRES ALL EMPLOYEES TO JOIN HMO FOR AT LEAST A YEAR:
Lockheed Corp. now requires all of its employees at three major divisions to
join a Health Maintenance Organization for at least one year. The divisions are in
Burbank, Cal., Sunnyvale, Cal., and Marietta, Ga.
HMO enrollees will pay no deductibles or co-payments. All full-time employees
and part time-employees who work at least 20 hours a week will be covered.
Other related developments:
* Mallinckrodt Inc., St. Louis, has signed a contract with the UAW calling for
100 percent reimbursement for pre-certification, outpatient diagnostic testing and
second surgical opinions. If an employee does not use the covered services, reimbursement is reduced to 50 percent.
* General Motors' agreement with UAW gives workers the right to choose between
traditional coverage, an HMO or preferred provider organization coverage. The
latter is a hew innovative health benefit package.
* Enrollment in HMOs sponsored by Blue Cross-Blue Shield increased by 32 percent between June 30, 1983 and June 30, 1984, a significant gain over the 23 percent
increase reported in the preceding 12 months. As of mid-1984, 41 Blue Cross and
Blue Shield plans were sponsoring 57 HMOs, enrolling 1.8 million members.
HEALTH CARE EMPLOYEES UNION CERTIFIED BY AFL-CIO:
The National Union of Hospital &amp; Health Care Employees has received a charter
as an AFL-CIO affiliate and declared a priority goal of organizing health care
workers in every part of the country.
"Our job is to organize the unorganized, help them win salaries and working
conditions in keeping with the vital work they do, and strive to make decent patient
care available to all Americans," said president Henry Nicholas.
The hospital employees union had previously been a division of the Retail,
Wholesale and Department Store Union. But the largest segment of the hospital and
health care workers — District 1199 of New York City — will remain with the retail
union as a consequence of an internal organization problem.
The newly chartered union will continue to maintain headquarters in New York.
A number of AFL-CIO affiliates now represent hospital and nursing home workers,
one of the fastest growing areas of labor activity. A Hospital Workers Organizing
Committee was established in 1968 as part of the Retail, Wholesale and Department
Store Union and was made a division of that union in 1971.
Note: Some confusion in identification is bound to develop as a result of
District 1199 remaining as part of the Retail Store union. This is because many of
the members of the new union belong to such locals called 1199C, 1199E, 1199/New
England, etc. They are all offshoots of the New York local, which is not part of
the new national union.
RTI GETS $3.6 MILLION TO STUDY ADJUSTMENT OF VIETNAM VETERANS:
The Veterans Administration has awarded a $3.6 million contract to Research
Triangle (NC) Institute to study post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other
readjustment problems among Vietnam-era veterans.
Both male and female veterans will be included in the large-scale study.
"The study findings should help us determine how many Vietnam-era veterans have
these problems and evaluate the effectiveness of our programs for providing assistance to them," said VA Administrator Harry N. Walters.
The study will focus on veterans who now have or have had readjustment problems, as well as those who made the transition to civilian life with little or no
difficulty.
Approximately 2,900 persons throughout the United States will be interviewed.
Data derived from the interviews will provide national estimates of the extent to

�Occupational Health &amp; Safety Letter, October 8, 1984

7

which their psychological and health status can be applied to the entire Vietnam-era
veteran population. It is the first time that such a full-scale, in-depth study on
this subject has been attempted, the VA said.
Groups to be interviewed include Vietnam veterans, Vietnam-era veterans, women
veterans, minority group veterans, incarcerated veterans, those living in rural and
urban areas, those seeking treatment at VA facilities, those with physical disabilities and a special control group of non-veterans. Families of veterans will also
will be interviewed.
VA said it had long recognized the need for such a study and had been planning
it for more than a year. The full study, mandated by Congress last November, is
expected to be completed by February 1988. However, the first phase will provide
the basis for an initial report to Congress by October 1, 1986.

Meanwhile, the first phase of a mammoth $100 million study by no less than
eight Federal agencies on the exposure of Vietnam veterans to Agent Orange is about
to get under way, under direction of the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta.
So vast is the project that new buildings to house the staff, scientific
instruments and computers for the Agent Orange study are under construction in
suburban Chamblee, Ga.
Dr. Peter M. Layde, a CDC researcher, is in charge of the project. Another key
figure is Dr. Barclay M. Shepard, director of Agent Orange studies for the VA.
More than 100,000 veterans have already received some form of treatment in VA
hospitals for conditions they say are related to dioxin exposure. The number is
growing steadily, and some psychologists have contended that even the fear that they
may have been exposed has caused emotional problems among some Vietnam veterans.
As part of the new studies, physical examinations will be given to 10,000
former servicemen, and many more thousands will be given questionnaires on their
health status, both physical and emotional.
The objective, said Dr. Layde, is to rule out the uncertainty which has marked
preliminary findings of studies in the last few years. In a nutshell, those findings can be summarized as: we don't see proof of physical harm from the exposure,
but we're not certain that there isn't.
Almost 150,000 veterans have already been examined as part of an Agent Orange
registry program launched by the VA in 1978.
SILICA EXPOSURE IN NORTH CAROLINA UNDER STUDY:
Industrial hygiene researchers have been studying for the last four years the
environmental conditions which lead to the development of silicosis in North Carolina miners and mineral processors.
The research is being conducted in cooperation with the North Carolina State
Industrial Commission, the occupational health branch of the North Carolina Division
of Health Services and the occupational health studies group of the University of
North Carolina. It is funded by NIOSH and by a DuPont Fellowship grant to the UNC
Department, of Environmental Sciences and Engineering.
Industrial processes with potential silica dust exposure include the quarrying
of building stone for dressing and crushing, the mining and milling of metallic and
non-metallic minerals, and foundry work.
The current occupational standard for exposure to silica dust is based largely
on a series of studies of exposure-disease relationships in the Vermont granite
industry. This detailed work documents employee exposures to airborne dust since
the late 1920s. The occupational history and health status of the workers have been
periodically updated since 1937.
A similar program of environmental and health surveillance has been carried out
by North Carolina since 1935. In that state the dusty trades include granite

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                    <text>Item D Number

°1856

Author

True Wi||iam

Corporate Author

Veterans Administration

'

R-

Report/Article Title Stress Symptomology Among Vietnam Veterans:
Analysis of the Veterans Administration Survey of
Veterans II

Journal/Book Tltto
Year

°00°

Month/Day
Color

a

Number of hnaaos

37

DOSCdpton NOtBS

Funding from Cooperative Studies Program, Study
#256, Veterans Administration Medical Research
Service. An earlier version of this paper was presented
at the Soceity for Epidemiological Research meetings
in Pittsburgh, PA in June 1986.

Wednesday, July 11,2001

Page 1857 of 1870

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY AMONG VIETNAM VETERANS:
ANALYSIS OF THE VETERANS ADMINISTRATION
SURVEY OF VETERANS II

WILLIAM R. TRUE1, JACK GOLDBERG2, SETH A. EISEN3

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

2

1 Psychiatry and Research Services (151A-JB), VA Medical
Center, St. Louis, MO
2

63125.

(Reprint requests to Dr. True.)

University of Illinois, School of Public Health, and the

Cooperative Studies Coordinating Center, VA Medical Center,
Hines, IL

60141.

3 Medical and Research Services, VA Medical Center, St.
Louis, MO

63125.

Running Head:
Acronym:

STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

PTSD = Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Acknowledgement of Funding:

Cooperative Studies Program,

Study # 256, Veterans Administration Medical Research Service
The authors acknowledge the contribution of Dr. A. J. Singh,
Director, Statistical Policy and Research Service, office of
Information Management and Statistics, Veterans Administration,
Washington, D.C. who provided the data tape and documentation,
and consulted with the authors.

Mr. Edward Barnes, programmer at

the Cooperative Studies Coordinating Center, Veterans
Administration Medical Center, Hines, IL, and Dr. Sharon Homan,
Assistant Professor of Community Health, St. Louis University
Center for Health Services Research and Education, St. Louis MO,
provided assistance.

Dr. Joel Royalty, Murray State University,

Murray KY, developed preliminary approaches to the data.
An earlier version of this paper was presented at the
Society for Epidemiological Research meetings in Pittsburgh, PA
in June 1986.

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

3

ABSTRACT

True, William R. (VA Medical Center, St. Louis, MO 63125),
J. Goldberg, and s. A. Eisen. Stress symptomatology among Vietnam
veterans: Analysis of the Veterans Administration Survey of
Veterans II.
In 1979, the Veterans Administration conducted a health
survey of 11,236 veterans.

The present analysis of this data

focuses on the effects of service in Vietnam and combat on stress
symptomatology among the 1,787 Vietnam era veterans who entered
the Army, Navy, Marines, or Air Force between 1965 and 1975. In
the unadjusted analysis, both service in Vietnam and combat were
related to the prevalence of nightmares, sleep problems, troubled
memories, depression, temper control, life goal indecision, guilt
feelings and confusion.

After controlling for length of active

military service, year of discharge, branch of service, rank at
discharge, draft status, age at discharge, race, and educational
attainment at discharge, combat exposure remained strongly
associated with all eight measures of Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder symptomatology.

Because the data were collected prior

to the current controversy about the potential psychological and
physical health effects of exposure to Agent Orange, the
likelihood of response bias is reduced.

The analysis

demonstrates that combat continues to have profound effects on
veterans' psychological health years after the conclusion of
military service.
Stress disorders, post traumatic; Vietnam; Veterans

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

4

Controversy about the effect of war stress on the current
well-being of Vietnam veterans have been prominent in popular,
policy, and scientific literature for some years.

Since the end

of the war, there have been eight major (1-8) studies of the
psychological effects of the Vietnam experience.

Debate about

the validity of their conclusions has turned upon the relative
strength of the research designs, the importance of pre-military
risk factors, and the nature and methods of measuring war stress
experiences and post-service outcomes.
Vietnam experience research studies can be divided into two
major design categories:

those based on convenience or volunteer

samples (1-3) and those based on cross-sectional
of defined target populations
sample is the work of Wilson

(4-8).

random samples

Typical of a convenience

(3) who identified a comprehensive

set of stress symptomatology markers which he related to Vietnam
service and combat exposure.
consisted of a self-selected

However, Wilson's study sample
set of Vietnam era veterans seeking

help for psychological problems.

Of greater methodological

sophistication are the cross-sectional

surveys.

Robins (4) and

Card (8) both selected samples based upon chronological criteria.
Robins used Army examinations to identify servicemen with
positive drug screens who left Vietnam in September,

1971.

Control subjects were drug-free soldiers from the same group.
Card selected veterans and controls from the 1974 Project Talent
follow-up study, a national longitudinal project which in 1960
administered an extensive battery of tests to a randomly selected

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

cohort of 375,000 9th and 12th graders (9).

5

The Egendorf study

(7) used an unusual "snowball" sampling technique in which a contacted household without a qualifying subject referred the study
personnel to veterans in the extended kin network (cousins,
nephews, etc.) who met study criteria.

The Harris (6) survey

used its national panel to identify a sample of Vietnam era
veterans.

While differing dramatically in scope and objectives,

each of these studies has contributed to our knowledge of the
psychological health of Vietnam era veterans.
The present study follows in the tradition of these crosssectional sample surveys of Vietnam era veterans by examining the
association between military service in Vietnam and subsequent
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) symptomatology in the
national Survey of Veterans II

(5).

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Study population;

Survey of Veterans II

The Survey of Veterans II, performed in 1979, was designed
to collect data by self-report on men who were veterans of active
duty military service.

The Veterans Administration and the

Bureau of the Census created an interagency agreement to conduct
the survey.

The Bureau of the Census drew the sample from

households which had been recently retired from the Current
Population Survey, an ongoing random sample of households
throughout the United States.
Men in the Current Population Survey who answered that they

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

6

had served in the United States armed forces further responded to
a detailed personal interview lasting approximately 45 minutes.
The questionnaire covered a wide range of topics related to the
veteran's health and well-being including sources of medical
care, psychological health, pension benefits, education,
rehabilitation, loans and burial benefits.
The sample originally consisted of 11,236 men.

From this

sample, 492 persons were found to be non-veterans, six were outof-scope, and 803 were non-interviews.

Therefore, 9,929 veterans

completed interviews for a response rate of 93 per cent.
Veterans who served during the Vietnam era (August 5, 1965
through May 7, 1975)

identified themselves by their responses to

the question, "What periods did you serve on active duty in the
U. S. Armed Forces?"

The investigators identified a total of

2,458 Vietnam era veterans.

From this group, veterans whose

active military service began prior to August 5, 1965

(650 men)

or who served in the Coast Guard or National Guard (21 men), were
excluded.

Thus, the final study sample of 1,787 servicemen was

limited to veterans of the Army, Navy, Marines or Air Force who
entered service after August 4, 1965.

Measure s of mi1itary service
A variety of approaches exist for measuring the stresses of
war.

The present study used two:

1) the simple dichotomy of

service in the war zone obtained from the question:

"Were you

stationed in Vietnam, Laos, or Cambodia; in the waters in or
around these countries; or fly in missions over these areas?",

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

7

and 2) a multi-dimensional index of exposure to combat as
specified in the responses to a set of nine 'Yes/No1 items asked
of all veterans who served in Vietnam.

These items include the

following combat roles and experiences:

Fired on the enemy, flew

in aircraft over war area, stationed at a forward observation
post, received incoming fire, encountered mines and booby traps,
received sniper or sapper fire, ambushed by the enemy, or was
engaged in a firefight with either Vietcong, guerilla, or North
Vietnamese Army.

These items are quite similar to those used by

Egendorf (7) in the Legacies of Vietnam study.
A summary index of combat exposure was constructed from the
nine questions on combat roles and experiences.
response to an item scored one point.

Each positive

The combat exposure index

is the summation over the nine combat roles and experiences.

The

mean value of the combat exposure index is 3.43 (n=771).
Cronbach's coefficient alpha, used to provide an indication of
the internal consistency of the combat exposure index, was

0.85.

The nine-point scale was coded for analysis into the ordinal
categories: a) non-Vietnam, b) Vietnam-no combat, c) Vietnam-low
combat, d) Vietnam-medium combat, and e) Vietnam-high combat.
Other military experience variables in the Survey of
'Veterans II reflect factors which have been extensively analyzed
in the Vietnam stress literature (10).

These include mode of

entry into service (drafted or enlisted), branch of service (Air
Force, Army, Navy, and Marines), rank or grade at discharge
(officer or non-officer), length of service (coded in the

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

8

original questionnaire as less than two years or 2-20 years), and
year of discharge (before or after 1968).

This last point was

analyzed because of claims (11) that soldiers discharged after
the Tet offensive in 1968 suffered increased stress

reactions.

The variable length of service was more inclusive than would have
been preferred, but further categorization was impossible.
Three further demographic factors were examined in the
analysis of the Survey of Veterans II:

race (white or non-

white), years of education at discharge (less than 12 and at
least 12), and age at discharge (less than 22, 22 to 24, and 25
and older).

This grouping of age at discharge reflects the

evidence in the literature (3) that adolescents exposed to war
stress may suffer from increased PTSD symptoms.
Measures of stress symptomatology
Traumatic stress was measured with a eight-item checklist
using specific symptoms.
form:

Questions were stated in the following

"Since your LAST release from active military service,

have you had . . . a) frightening dreams or nightmares, b) sleep
problems, c) troubled memories, d) depression, e) temper control
problems, f) life goal indecision, g) guilt feelings, h)
confusion?"

The items asked for overall prevalence during the

years since discharge.

There was no probe for timing of the

symptom.
Sufficient data were not available to make a presumptive
diagnosis of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.

The items included

in the Survey of Veterans II represent the symptom list which in

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

9

1979 was associated in the clinical literature with the
psychological consequences of combat and subsequently have been
largely incorporated as the core criteria for the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual III (12) diagnosis of PTSD.

These include

nightmares, sleep problems, and guilt feelings.

Implied in the

PTSD diagnosis are the further items of life goal indecision,
troubled memories, confusion, depression and temper control.
Statistical analysis
The statistical analysis of the relationship

between

military service and post-traumatic stress symptomatology is done
in stages.

The first stage uses simple contingency table

analyses to examine whether service in Vietnam, and specifically
exposure to combat, is associated with increased levels of post
traumatic stress symptomatology.

Prevalence odds ratios and 95

per cent confidence intervals are calculated for each measure of
post-traumatic symptomatology.

The second stage of analysis

examines each of the eight measures of post-traumatic stress in
more detail.

in particular, logistic regression is used to

determine if the association between Vietnam service and stress
symptomatology is confounded by military service or demographic
factors.

Factor adjusted logistic odds ratios and 95 per cent

confidence intervals are presented for each of the military
service and demographic variables examined.

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

10

RESULTS
Post traumatic stress disorder symptoms,
Vietnam service and combat exposure
Table 1 presents the relationship between service in Vietnam
and exposure to combat with the eight symptoms of PTSD.

For each

of the eight symptoms a positive association is observed for
Vietnam service.

The most striking findings are found for

nightmares and troubled memories.

Veterans who served in Vietnam

are nearly four times more likely (f

= 3.74, 95 per cent C.I.

2.88-4.87) to have experienced nightmares compared to veterans
who did not serve in Vietnam.

Likewise, Vietnam service veterans

were three and a half times more likely to have reported troubled
memories of military service than non-Vietnam veterans.

Several

other symptoms such as sleep problems, temper control problems,
life goal indecision, and confusion are one and a half to two
times more common in Vietnam service veterans compared to
veterans who did not serve in Vietnam.

The weakest association

(though the 95 per cent C.I.'s do not include unity) with Vietnam
service is found for depression

( f = 1.47) and guilt feelings (f

• 1.39).
The prevalence of each of the eight PTSD symptoms
with increasing levels of combat intensity.

increases

The most dramatic

association with combat exposure was observed for nightmares and
troubled memories.

Veterans who were exposed to high intensity

combat were eight times more likely than veterans who did not
serve in Vietnam to report nightmares since discharge from active

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY
duty.

True et al.

11

Similarly, reports of troubled memories about experiences

in the military were more than seven and a half times more common
in high combat exposure Vietnam veterans compared to non-Vietnam
service veterans.

Odds ratios for the association of combat with

temper control problems, guilt feelings, confusion, sleep
problems, and depression all display a strong trend with combat
exposure.

A minimum of a twofold increase in the prevalence of

each symptom was found with high combat exposed veterans who were
compared to the non-Vietnam veterans.

Only for the symptom life

goal indecision does the high combat exposed group display an
odds ratio of less than two.
A closer examination of the relationship of combat with the
PTSD symptoms is revealing.

For troubled memories, the

prevalence odds ratios increase monotonically and sharply
beginning with the Vietnam service non-combat group.

An equally

steady progression in prevalence is observed for nightmares.
Several of the symptoms such as sleep problems, depression, life
goal indecision, guilt problems and confusion, show a relatively
small increase in prevalence among the Vietnam non-combat group
and Vietnam low combat group.

It is only when combat exposure

reaches the medium and high levels that the prevalence odds
ratios for these conditions rise appreciably.
PTSD symptoms - Multiple logistic regression analysis of
military service and demographic factors
Table 2 presents a multiple logistic regression analysis of
the relationship of nightmares to six military service and three

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY
demographic factors.

True et al.

12

As in the unadjusted analysis, combat

exposure remains strongly associated with the prevalence of
nightmares in Vietnam era veterans; a four unit change in combat
produces nearly an eight-fold increase in the frequency of
reported nightmares.

None of the other military service factors

are associated with the prevalence of nightmares.

Age at

discharge and race demonstrate significant associations with the
prevalence of nightmares.

Non-white veterans are nearly twice as

likely as white veterans to report troubling dreams or nightmares.

Age at discharge displays a negative association with the

frequency of nightmares; men who were discharged after the age of
25 report problems with nightmares 0.64 less often than men
discharged prior to age 22.
The relationship of the military service and demographic
factors with depression is examined in table 3.

Significant

associations are observed for combat exposure, age, race and
education at discharge from active duty.

Combat exposure is

positively related to the prevalence of depression.

Vietnam

service high combat veterans report depression more than twice as
frequently as non-Vietnam veterans.

Though not significant,

veterans who served in the Army, Navy, or Marines show a trend
toward a lower frequency of depression compared to Air Force
veterans, after the adjustment for combat exposure.

Older age at

time of discharge is associated with a diminished prevalence of
depression.

Conversely, the factor adjusted prevalence odds

ratio for race indicates that depression is increased in non-

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY
whites.

True et al.

13

Education is also related to the prevalence of

depression; veterans discharged with less than 12 years of
education are more than one and a half times more likely to
report problems with depression.
Table 4 presents the results of the logistic regression
analysis for the symptom guilt feelings.

The combat exposure

index is significantly related to the prevalence of guilt
feelings, even after adjustment for military service and
demographic variables.

Several of the military service factors

exhibit unexpected relationships with the prevalence of guilt
feelings.

Veterans released after 1968 are less likely to report

guilt feelings than veterans released prior to 1969.

Likewise,

veterans who served in the Army, Navy or Marines display a trend
toward reporting feelings of guilt about activities during
military service less often than veterans who served in the Air
Force, though this is not significant.

Each of the three

demographic factors are associated with the presence of guilt
feelings in veterans.

Age at discharge from active duty displays

an inverse association with the prevalence of guilt feelings; men
who were discharged from active duty after the age of 24 were
0.68 less likely to report guilt feelings compared to men who
were discharged prior to age 22.

Non-white veterans complain of

guilt feelings more frequently than white veterans ( f = 1.59, 95
per cent C.I. 1.11-2.28).

Veterans who had not completed high

school when they were released from active duty are one and a
half times more likely to report guilt feelings compared to

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True eh al.

14

veterans who had completed at least a high school education.
Factor adjusted prevalence odds ratios examining the
relationship between troubled memories and the six military
service factors and three demographic factors are presented in
table 5.

Most striking is the strong association

troubled memories and combat exposure.

between

A four unit change on the

grouped combat exposure index produces a more than seven-fold
increase in the prevalence of troubled memories after adjustment
for covariates.

None of the remaining military service factors

are associated with the prevalence of troubled memories.

Of the

demographic factors examined, both age and race are related to
troubled memories.

Men who are discharged at an older age are

less likely to report troubled memories.

Non-white veterans are

more likely to report troubled memories.
Table 6 examines the relationship between military service
and demographic factors and temper control problems.

The combat

index is positively related to the prevalence of temper control
problems which are nearly three times more common in veterans who
experienced high levels of combat exposure compared to nonVietnam service veterans.

Of the military service covariates

examined, only length of service and rank at discharge are found
to be marginally related to the prevalence of temper control
problems.

However, marginal associations are observed for both

length of service and rank at discharge.

For length of service,

veterans who served less than two years are less likely to report
temper control problems than veterans who served between 2 and 20

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY
years.

True et al.

15

A twofold increase in the frequency of temper control

problems is found for veterans discharged as non-officers
compared to veterans discharged as officers.

Of the demographic

factors examined, age and years of education at discharge are
both independently associated with temper control problems.
Older age at discharge (25 or above) is associated with a reduced
prevalence of temper control problems compared to younger age at
discharge (21 and under).

Also, men with less than a high school

education complained of temper control problems more frequently
than those who completed high school.
Factors associated with the prevalence of the PTSD symptom
life goal indecision are examined in table 7.

Combat exposure

demonstrates a positive relationship with the prevalence of life
goal indecision.

High combat Vietnam veterans are 1.85 times

more likely to report problems with life goal indecision compared
to non-Vietnam veterans.

Among the remaining military service

factors, a significant association with life goal indecision is
found for rank at discharge and whether the veteran was drafted
or enlisted.

For branch of service, Marines, Army and Navy

veterans report problems with life goal indecision more commonly
than Air Force veterans; this difference is only marginally
significant (P &lt; 0.10).

Veterans who are non-officers are twice

as likely to complain of problems with life goal
compared to veterans who are officers.

indecision

Veterans who are drafted

into military service are less likely to report problems with
life goal indecision than veterans who enlisted into the

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY
military.

True et al.

16

Both age and years of education at release are related

to the prevalence of life goal indecision.

Age at discharge is

negatively related to life goal indecision, with older age at
discharge associated with a lower prevalence.

Veterans with less

than 12 years of education report life goal indecision problems
more frequently than veterans with at least 12 years of education
( 7 «= 1.44, 95 per cent C.I. 1.01-2.03).
Table 8 presents factor adjusted prevalence odds ratios for
sleep problems.

Combat exposure shows a positive

relationship with reporting of sleep problems.

dose-response

A four unit

change on the grouped combat scale produces a twofold increase in
the prevalence odds ratio.

None of the other military service

factors are significantly associated with the prevalence of sleep
problems.

Of the demographic factors, only years of education is

related to sleep problems.

As was found for many of the

previously examined PTSD symptoms, less education is associated
with a higher prevalence of sleep problems.
marginally associated with sleep problems.

Age at discharge is
Consistent with other

PTSD symptoms, age is negatively related to sleep disorders.
Table 9 presents the results from a logistic regression
analysis of confusion with the military service and demographic
factors.

A positive and significant association

the intensity of combat exposure.

is found with

Age at discharge is negatively

associated with confusion as veterans discharged over the age of
24 complain of difficulties with confusion about half as
frequently as veterans discharged prior to age 22.

Non-white

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

17

veterans are more than twice as likely to report this symptom
compared to white veterans.

Educational level is related to the

prevalence of confusion, with the less educated (under 12 years
of schooling) more likely to report this problem than veterans
with at least 12 years of education.

DISCUSSION
The analysis of the Survey of Veterans II has demonstrated a
marked correlation between eight symptoms of PTSD and military
service and combat experience in Vietnam.

The advantages of this

study include a large random sample (n=l,787) selected from the
total U. S. population, an excellent interview response rate (93
per cent), and the collection of data prior to the recent
controversy surrounding the issue of the health effects of
possible exposure of Vietnam veterans to Agent Orange.

The

analysis excluded men who served in the military prior to 1965;
thus, the results are uncontaminated by military service prior to
the Vietnam era.

An ordinal index of combat exposure was

constructed which demonstrated a high level of internal
consistency.
One disadvantage of the study was the incidence-prevalence
bias of cross-sectional studies.

It was not possible to

determine if the elevation of PTSD symptomatology

found for

Vietnam veterans, and especially for those exposed to combat,
existed prior to military service.

Pre-military service risk

factors, prominent in much of the literature about PTSD (4, 8,

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

11) were unavailable on the survey.

18

Likewise, there were no

measures of post military service traumatic events.

Another

disadvantage is that the measures of PTSD symptomatology included
in the Survey of Veterans II were not sufficiently complete to
make the specific psychiatric

diagnosis.

A summary of the associations among the eight PTSD symptoms
and the nine military service and demographic variables is
presented in table 10.

The relationship of each factor with each

symptom is indicated by a plus or a minus sign.

For nominal

factors the reference category is indicated to assist
interpretation.
Four factors are consistently
symptomatology:

associated with PTSD

combat exposure index, age at discharge, race,

and years of education at discharge.

Only combat was associated

with an increased prevalence in all eight symptoms.

Age at

discharge was found to be inversely associated with the
prevalence of seven stress symptoms.
discharge was inversely associated

Years of education at

with six symptoms.

white) correlated positively with five symptoms.

Race

(non-

None of the

remaining military service factors demonstrated a consistent
association with the PTSD symptoms.

That combat shows such a

positive correlation with all symptoms is consistent with other
studies (8, 6, 7,).

Indeed, the first evidence in the literature

of the presence of marked psychologic symptomatology came in
clinical studies which investigated the influence of combat
These early studies, however, were not controlled.

(13).

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

19

A rnonotonic increase in the prevalence of several PTSD
symptoms was observed with combat exposure in the unadjusted
analysis.

For example, for the symptom nightmares, prevalence

odds ratios increase from 1.32 (no combat) to 2.49 (low combat),
5.49

(medium combat), and 8.19

(high combat).

troubled memories increases from 1.73
combat), to 5.29

Similarly,

(no combat), to 2.02

(medium combat) and to 7.85

(low

(high combat).

The

other symptoms show consistent but lesser magnitudes of change.
Although there is considerable consistency in reporting
strong effects of elevated war stress experiences, some studies
(4, 14, 15) have not found these risks to outweigh the role of
predispositional risk factors.

The original Robins (4) study

included a seven-point combat scale, but as combat did not show
any association with psychological
presented.

outcomes, the data were not

Helzer's work (14, 15) derived from the same cohort,

interviewed veterans one and three years after their return to
the United States.

The study found an association between combat

and depression in the first survey, with 27 per cent of the
Vietnam veterans reporting at least some depression, which had
largely evaporated by the second survey.

in the Helzer studies,

combat was a three-level ordinal scale, and the measurement of
depression covers only a portion of the symptoms now included
under the broader category of PTSD.
Card (8) used a nine-item combat scale, plus a special
measurement for being wounded, and found that 8 of the 10 combat
experiences were significantly associated with the PTSD scale she

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY
devised,

True et al.

20

card scored PTSD as present if two symptoms existed in

each of the symptom categories of re-experiencing trauma,
numbing, and miscellaneous.

This is a somewhat idiosyncratic

definition not conforming with the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual ill (12).

Further, her analysis of the stress symptoms

was limited because all symptom data were reduced to an additive
scale, thus losing the ability to look at individual symptoms.
Harris (6) also used a nine-point combat index, but the
results of the analysis are not comparable to the Survey of
Veterans II because the study's only symptom is the simple
statement 'Have you had. . Mental or emotional problems?"

While

there were three-fold increases in 'problems' due to combat, no
refined analysis was conducted.
Egendorf et al. (7) used an 11-point combat scale, the most
extensive of the measurements of war stress in the major surveys
using random sampling.

Their major finding was that more than a

third of heavily combat exposed veterans showed significant
stress symptoms compared to less than 20 per cent of other
veterans.

In later analyses of this study, Laufer (16, 17)

focused attention on the importance of exposure to and participation in abusive violence and atrocities, which appear to markedly
enhance stress

reactions.

The importance of the combat exposure index is highlighted
by a comparison to the simple dichotomy of Vietnam versus nonVietnam service.

This comparison can be seen in table 1, where

prevalence odds ratios for Vietnam service are not pronounced for

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

the symptoms such as guilt feelings

(1.39, 95 per cent C.I.

21

1.10-

1.74) and sleep problems (1.53, 95 per cent C.I. 1.20-1.94).
However, a distinct gradient in the prevalence of these symptoms
is observed with increasing levels of the combat exposure index.
Previous studies (7, 8) have found that service in Vietnam itself
did not induce .PTSD

symptoms.

Analysis of the variable race reveals that non-whites have a
pattern of increased risk for suffering PTSD symptoms.

This

pattern was present for five of the eight symptoms, with nonwhites suffering more nightmares, troubled memories, depression,
guilt feelings, and confusion than whites.

Kadushin (18) found

that being white attenuated war stress, and that blacks showed
twice the prevalence of stress symptomatology with exposure to
high combat.

However, Card (8) did not find a correlation

between PTSD (as defined by her) and race.

Card dichotomized

PTSD into present or absent while Kadushin analyzed stress as a
continuous scale.
Veterans discharged from service with less than 12 years of
education are more likely to suffer from sleep problems, depression, temper control problems, life goal indecision, guilt, and
confusion, independent of the effects of combat.

The Legacies

study (18) found that low educational attainments were correlated
with increased stress.

Helzer (14) found a significant correla-

tion in the prevalence of depression at one year after discharge
with educational attainment, defined as in the Survey of Veterans
II.

However, these differences had resolved by the time of the

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY
three-year follow-up.

True et al.

22

Card (8) had the most exhaustive data on

educational attainment, but did not use education at enlistment
or discharge as a covariate in the analysis of war stress and
PTSD symptomatology.
Age at discharge is negatively related to PTSD symptoms,
with older age being protective.

The only symptom not associated

with age at release is sleep problems.

Greater maturity during

war service appears to be protective against later
symptomatology.

Wilson and Krauss (3) found suffering traumatic

stress during the formative late adolescent years to be
especially predictive of higher stress symptom outcomes.
Further support for the increased

psychological

vulnerability of younger Vietnam experienced veterans to the
development of PTSD symptomatology is provided by the postservice mortality study of conducted by the Centers for Disease
Control (19).

The authors found an increased mortality rate in

the 5 years following discharge among Vietnam veterans, and
particularly those discharged before age 21.
causes of death were the following:

The principal

accidents, suicide,

homicide, and poisonings, including drug-related incidents.
The present study did not identify any consistent
association of stress symptoms with enlistment status
(volunteered or drafted), length of service, branch of service,
or rank at discharge.

Year of discharge (before or after 1968—

the Tet Offensive) appears not to have the importance reported by
Laufer (11).

Only the symptom guilt is correlated with year of

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

23

discharge, with post 1968 service suggesting a protective effect
( f

= 0.64, 95 per cent C.I. 0.44-0.93).

Card (8) examined this

point as well, and also found no support for the distinction
between service before and after 1968.
Evidence has been presented of the presence of traumatic
stress symptomatology for a randomly selected sample of veterans
studied in 1979, a time preceding recent controversies about
Agent Orange and war effects.

That these symptoms are magnified

by combat exposure confirms clinical experience and other
research.

�True et al. 24

STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY
TABLE 1
The association of the Vietnam service and combat
exposure with the eight measures of post-traumatic
stress symptomatology

Symptoms of
Post-Traumatic
Stress

Service in
Vietnam ?

No

n
Nightmares
Yes

No
Prevalence Odds Ratios
(95% CI)

85
925
1.00

Yes

Non-Vietnam

Vietnam
No Combat

n

n

n

85
925

Combat Exposure Index
Vietnam
Vietnam
Low Combat
Medium
Combat

13
107

197
573
3.74
(.848)
28-.7

n

60
262

1.00

1.32
(7-.5
.124)

2.49
(1.76-3.53)

160
851

21
99

56
266

n
60
119
5.49
(.678)
38-.1

Vietnam
High
Combat

n
64
85
8.19
(.71.4
57-16)

Sleep Problems

Yes
No
Prevalence Odds Ratios
(95% CI)

160
851
1.00

172
599
. 15
.3
(.019)
12-.4

1*00

1.13
(6-.6
.818)

105
906

20
100

1.12
(8-.6
.015)

43
136
1.68
(.524)
11-.6

52
98
2.82
(.640)
19-.7

Troubled Memories

Yes
No
Prevalence Odds Ratios
(95% CI)

105
906
1.00

220
549
34
.6
(.044)
27-.3

1.00

1.73
(.328)
10-.9

61
260

68
111

2.02
5.29
(.428) (.774)
14-.4
37-.1

71
78
7.85
(5.58-11.05)

Depression

Yes
No
Prevalence Odds Ratios
(95% CI)

312
699
1.00

306
465
1.47
(.117)
12-.9

312
699

41
79

1.00

1.16
(7-.4
.817)

110
212
1.16
(8-.2
.915)

83
96
1.94
(.126)
14-.7

72
78
2.07
(.729)
14-.1

�True et al. 25

STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY
TABLE 1
The association of the Vietnam service and combat
exposure with the eight measures of post-traumatic
stress symptomatology
(Continued)

Symptoms of
Post-Traumatic
Stress

Service in.
Vietnam ?

No

n

Yes

Non—Vietnam

Vietnam
No Combat

n

n

Combat Exposure Index
Vietnam
Vietnam
Low Combat
Medium
Combat

n
15
105

n

n

Vietnam
High
Combat

n

Temper Control Problems

Yes
No
Prevalence Odds Ratios
(95% CD

144
868

176
595

144
868

1.00

1.78
(.022)
14-.7

1.00

0.86
(4-.2
.915)

225
786

231
539

225
786

34
86

62
260

49
130

1.44
2.27
(.419) (.832)
10-.9
15-.8

50
100
3.01
( . 8 4 .36)
20-,

Life Goal Indecision

Yes
No
Prevalence Odds Ratios
(95% CI)

1.00

1.50
(.118)
12-.5

1.00

1.38
(9-.1
.121)

191
821

188
583

191
821

23
97

1.00

1.39
(.017)
11-.4

1.00

1.02
(6-.5
.316)

148
864

163
607

148
864

1.00

1.57
(.320)
12-.0

1.00

92
230

57
122

48
101

1.40
1.63
1.66
1 1 - 4)
( . 5 1 8 ) ( . 6 2 3 ) ( . 5 2. 1
10-.5
11-.1

Guilt Feelings

Yes
No
Prevalence Odds Ratios
(95% CI)

65
257
1.09
(7-.9
.914)

49
130

51
99

2.21
1.62
15-.
( . 3 2 3 ) ( . 4 3 19)
11-.3

Confusion

Yes
No
Prevalence Odds Ratios
(95% CD

19
101
1.10
(6-.5
.518)

60
262
1.34
(9-.6
.618)

44
135

40
109

2.14
1.90
14-.
( . 0 2 7 ) ( . 4 3 18)
13-.8

�STRESS

SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al. 26
TABLE 2

Factor adjusted prevalence odds ratios for nightmares

Military Service and

Demographic Factors

Logistic Regression
Beta Coefficients

Factor Adjusted
Prevalence
Odds Ratios

95%
CI

Military Service Factors
Combat Exposure

.5181
1

Non-Vietnam
Vietnam no combat
Vietnam low combat
Vietnam medium combat
Vietnam high combat
Length of Service
2 to 20 years
less than 2 years
Year of Discharge
Before 1968
1968 and after
Branch of Service
Air Force
Army
Navy
Marines

1.00
1.68
2.82
4.73
7.94

(1.53-1.8
(2.33-3.4
(3.55-6.3
(5.41-11.

1.00
.97

( .69-1.3

1.00
1.44

( .87-2.41

1.00
1.07
.75
.98

( .68-1.6}
( .45-1.24
( .56-1. 7j

1.00
1.19

( .61-2.31

1.00
1.00

( .68-1.48

1.00
.80
.64

( .65- .99
( .42- .99

1.00
1.96

(1.31-2.92

1.00
1.28

( .84-1.96

-.0256

.3657

.0649
-.2926
-.0179

Rank of Discharge
Officer
Non-Officer

.1716

Enlisted vs. Drafted
Enlisted
Drafted

.0041

Demographic Factors
Age at Discharge
21 and younger
22 - 24
25 and older
Race
White
Non- white
Years of Education at
Discharge
At least 12 yrs of
education

Less than 12 years

-.2232

.6722

.2490

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al. 27
TABLE 3

Factor adjusted prevalence odds ratios for depression

Military Service and
Demographic Factors

Logistic Regression
Beta Coefficients

Factor Adjusted
Prevalence
Odds Ratios

95%
CI

Military Service Factors
Combat Exposure
Non-Vietnam
Vietnam no combat
Vietnam low combat
Vietnam medium combat
Vietnam high combat

.1930
1.00
1.21
1.47
1.78
2.16

1.00
.98

( .63-1.25)

1.00
.68
.85
.74

( .50- .94)
( .61-1.19)
( .48-1.13)

1.00
1.53

( .93-2.51)

1.00
1.08

( .80-1.44)

1.00
.77
.60

( .66- .91)
( .43- .82)

1.00
1.57

( 1.13-2.18)

1.00
1.58

(1 .14-2.19)

-.0236

Year of Discharge
Before 1968
1968 and after

( .76-1.25)

1.00
.89

Length of Service
2 to 20 years
less than 2 years

( 1.12-1.31)
( 1.26-1.71)
(1.42-2.24)
( 1.60-2.93)

-.1167

Branch of Service
Air Force
Army
Navy
Marines

-.3831
-.1603
-.3018

Rank of Discharge
Officer
Non-Officer

.4239

Enlisted vs. Drafted

.0740

Enlisted

Drafted
Demographic Factors
Age at Discharge
21 and younger
22 - 24
25 and older
Race
White
Non-white
Years of Education at
Discharge
At least 12 years of
education

Less than 12 years

-.2587

.4508

.4583

�True et al. 28

STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

TABLE 4
Factor adjusted prevalence odds ratios for guilt feelings

Military Service and
Demographic Factors

Logistic Regression
Beta Coefficients

Factor Adjusted
Prevalence
Odds Ratios

95%
CI

Military Service Factors
Combat Exposure
Non-Vietnam
Vietnam no combat
Vietnam low combat
Vietnam medium combat
Vietnam high combat

.1828
1.00
1.20
1.44
1.73
2.08

Length of Service
2 to 20 years
less than 2 years

-.0800

Year of Discharge
Before 1968
1968 and after

(1.10-1.31)
(1.21-1.71)
(1.34-2.24)
(1.48-2.92)

-.4446

Branch of Service
Air Force
Army
Navy
Marines
Rank of Discharge
Officer
Non-Officer
Enlisted vs. Drafted
Enlisted
Drafted

1.00

.92

( .69-1.23)

1.00

.64

( .44- .93)

1.00

-.3951
-.3524
-.4697

.67
.70
.63

( .47- .96)
( .48-1.03)
( .38-1.02)

.4276
1.00
1.53

( .85-2.78)

-.1096
1.00

.90

( .64-1.26)

Demographic Factors
Age at Discharge
21 and younger
22 - 24
25 and older
Race
White
Non- white
Years of Education at
Discharge
At least 12 years of
education

Less than 12 years

-.1954
1.00

.82
.68

( .68- .99)
( .47- .98)

.4640
1.00
1.59

(1.11-2.28)

1.00
1.50

(1.04-2.15)

.4035

�STRESS

SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al. 29

TABLE 5
Factor adjusted prevalence odds ratios for troubled memories

Military Service and
Demographic Factors

Logistic Regression
Beta Coefficients

Factor Adjusted
Prevalence
Odds Ratios

95%
CI

Military Service Factors
Combat Exposure
Non-Vietnam
Vietnam no combat
Vietnam low combat
Vietnam medium combat
Vietnam high combat
Length of Service
2 to 20 years
less than 2 years
Year of Discharge
Before 1968
1968 and after
Branch of Service
Air Force
Army
Navy
Marines

.5015
1.00
1.65
2.73
4.50
7.43

(1.51-1.81)
(2.27-3.27)
(3.43-5.91)
(5.17-10.69)

1.00
.85

( .62-1.17)

1.00
1.26

( .79-2.02)

1.00
1.16
1.20
.97

( .76-1.78)
( .76-1.88)
( .56-1.67)

1.00
1.19

( .65-2.19)

1.00
1.05

( .72-1.51)

1.00
.81
.66

( .66- .99)
( .44- .98)

1. 00
1.56

(1.05-2.32)

1.00
.96

( .63-1.47)

-.1682

.2339

.1513
.1797
-.0353

Rank of Discharge
Officer
Non-Officer

.1727

Enlisted vs. Drafted
Enlisted
Drafted

.0456

Demographic Factors
Age at Discharge
21 and younger
22-24
25 and older
Race
White
Non-white
Years of Education at
Discharge
At least 12 years of
education
Less than 12 years

-.2105

.4472

-.0397

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al. 30
TABLE 6

Factor adjusted prevalence odds ratios for temper control problems

Military Service and
Demographic Factors

Logistic Regression
Beta Coefficients

Factor Adjusted
Prevalence
Odds Ratios

95%
CI

Military Service Factors
Combat Exposure
Non-Vietnam
Vietnam no combat
Vietnam low combat
Vietnam medium combat
Vietnam high combat

.2695

1.00
1.31
1.71
2.24
2.94
1.00
.75

( .56-1.29)

1.00
1.04
.98
1.09

( .69-1.56)
( .64-1.52)
( .65-1.83)

1.00
2.13

( .99-4.62)

1.00
.93

( .65-1.35)

1.00
.64
.41

( .52- .79)
( .27- .62)

1.00
.69

( .44-1.09)

1.00
1.82

(1.26-2.64)

-.2932

Year of Discharge
Before 1968
1968 and after

( .54-1.02)

1.00
.85

Length of Service
2 to 20 years
less than 2 years

(1.20-1.43)
(1.43-2.05)
(1.71-2.94)
(2.05-4.22)

-.1631

Branch of Service
Air Force
Army
Navy
Marines
Rank of Discharge
Officer
Non-Officer
Enlisted vs. Drafted
Enlisted
Drafted

.0345
-.0186
.0874
.7576

-.0678

Demographic Factors
Age at Discharge
21 and younger
22 - 24
25 and older
Race
White
No n- white
Years of Education at
Discharge
At least 12 years of
education
Less than 12 years

-.4452

-.3652

.6001

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al. 31
TABLE 7

Factor adjusted prevalence odds ratios for life goal indecision

Military Service and
Demographic Factors

Logistic Regression
Beta Coefficients

Factor Adjusted
Prevalence
Odds Ratios

95%
CI

Military Service Factors
Combat Exposure
Non-Vietnam
Vietnam no combat
Vietnam low combat
Vietnam medium combat
Vietnam high combat
Length of Service
2 to 20 years
less than 2 years
Year of Discharge
Before 1968
1968 and after

.1541
1.00
1.17
1.36
1.59
1.85

(1.08-1.27)
(1.16-1.60)
(1.24-2.03)
(1.34-2.57)

1.00
.82

( .62-1.07)

1.00
1.25

( .84-1.85)

1.00
.92
.80
.0
6

( .66-1.28)
( .56-1.15)
( .47- .76)

1.00
2.00

(1.13-3.55)

1.00
.65

( .47- .90)

1.00
.72
.52

( .60- .86)
( .36- .74)

1.00
1.00

( .69-1.44)

1.00
1.44

i(1.01-2.03)

-.2052

.2207

Branch of Service
Air Force
Army
Navy
Marines
Rank of Discharge
Officer
Non-Officer
Enlisted vs. Drafted
Enlisted
Drafted

-.0878
-.2178
-.5178
.6935

-.4308

Demographic Factors
Age at Discharge
21 and younger
22 - 24
25 and older

-.3281

Race
White
Non-white

-.0015

Years of Education at
Discharge
At least 12 years of
education
Less than 12 years

.3616

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al. 32
TABLE 8

Factor adjusted prevalence odds ratios for sleep problems

Military Service and
Demographic Factors

Logistic Regression
Beta Coefficients

Factor Adjusted
Prevalence
Odds Ratios

95%
CI

Military Service Factors
Combat Exposure
Non-Vietnam
Vietnam no combat
Vietnam low combat
Vietnam medium combat
Vietnam high combat

.1908

Length of Service
2 to 20 years
less than 2 years

.0961

Year of Discharge
Before 1968
1968 and after
Branch of Service
Air Force
Army
Navy
Marines

1.00
1.21
1.46
1.77
2.15

(1.11-1.32)
(1.23-1.75)
(1.36-2.31)
(1.51-3.05)

1.00
1.10

( .82-1.48)

1.00
.88

( .59-1.32)

1.00
1.17
.85
1.55

( .78-1.75)
( .54-1.33)
( .94-2.56)

1.00
.99

( .56-1.74)

1.00
.93

( .65-1.31)

1.00
.83
.70

( .69-1.01)
( .47-1.03)

1.00
1.28

( .87-1.89)

1.00
1.60

(1.11-2.31)

-.1256

.1578
-.1621
.4397

Rank of Discharge
Officer
Non-Officer

-.0142

Enlisted vs. Drafted
Enlisted
Drafted

-.0774

Demographic Factors
Age at Discharge
21 and younger
22 - 24
25 and older
Race
White
Non-white
Years of Education at
DischargeAt least 12 years of
education
Less than 12 years

-.1816

.2474

.4726

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al. 33
TABLE 9

Factor adjusted prevalence odds ratios for confusion

Military Service and

Demographic Factors

Logistic Regression
Beta Coefficients

Factor Adjusted
Prevalence
Odds Ratios

95%
CI

Military Service Factors
Combat Exposure
Non-Vietnam
Vietnam no combat
Vietnam low combat
Vietnam medium combat
Vietnam high combat

.2057

Length of Service
2 to 20 years
less than 2 years

.1174

Year of Discharge
Before 1968
1968 and after
Branch of Service
Air Force
Army
Navy
Marines
Rank of Discharge
Officer
Non-Officer.
Enlisted vs. Drafted
Enlisted
Drafted

1.00
1.23
1.51
1.85
2.28

(1.12-1.35)
(1.25-1.82)
(1.41-2.45)
(1.57-3.29)

1.00
1.12

( .83-1.53)

1.00
.82

( .54-1.24)

1.00
.98
1.15
.99

( .65-1.49)
( .74-1.78)
( .58-1.70)

1.00
1.51

( .74-3.04)

1.00
.90

( .62-1.30)

1.00
.74
.55

( .60- .91)
( .37- .83)

1.00
2.09

(1.45-3.03)

1.00
1.75

(1.20-2.54)

-.1950

-.0191
-.1405
-.0081
.4089

-.1030

Demographic Factors
Age at Discharge
21 and younger
22 - 24
25 and older
Race
White
Non-white
Years of Education at
Discharge
At least 12 years of
education

Less than 12 years

-.2974

.7395

.5575

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al. 34 .
TABLE 10
Summary of analyses of PTSD symptoms
PTSD SYMPTOMS

Military Service
and Demographic
Factors
Combat

Nightmares

***

Sleep
Problems
***

Troubled
Memories
***

Degression

***

Temper
Control
Problems

***

Life
Goal
Indecision
**
*

Guilt
Feelings
***

Confusion

***

Length of
Service
(2-20 yrs)
Year of
Release
(Before 1968)

_*

Branch
(Air Force)
Rank at
Discharge
(Officer)
Drafted
(Enlisted)
Age of
Discharge

Race
(White)
Years of
Education
(M2 yrs)

**

***

***

**

***

**

**

**

**

**

*p£.05
**p£.01
***p£.001
i" Positive and inverse associations between each military service and demographic factor and PTSD symptom are
represented by plus ( ) and minus (-) signs, respectively.
+

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

35

REFERENCES

1 Borus JF. Reentry II. "Making It" Back in the States. American
Journal of Psychiatry 1973;130(8):850-854.
2 Nace EP, O'Brien CP, Mintz J, et al. Stress Disorders Among
Vietnam Veterans. C. R. Figley, New York: Brunner/Mazel,
1978:71-128.
3 Wilson JP, Krauss GE. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and the
War Veteran Patient, in William E. Kelly, New York:
Brunner/Mazel, 1985:102-147.
4 Robins LN, Davis DH, Goodwin DW. Drug Use by U.S. Army
Enlisted Men in Vietnam: A Follow-Up on Their Return Home.
American Journal of Epidemiology 1974;99(4):235-249.
5 Veterans Administration. 1979 National Survey of Veterans,
Summary Report. 1980.
6 Harris L. Myths and Realities: A Study of attitudes toward
Vietnam era Veterans. Washington, DC 1980. Submitted to the
Committee on Veterans' Affairs.
7 Egendorf A, Kadushin C, Laufer RS, et al. Summary of Findings.
New York City: The Center for Policy Research, Inc., 1981. A
Study Conducted for the Veterans Administration.
8 Card JJ. Lives after Vietnam. Lexington, Massachusetts
Toronto: Lexington Books, D.C. Heath and Company, 1983.
9 Wise LL, McLaughlin DH, Steel L. The Project TALENT Data Bank
Handbook.

Palo Alto: American Institutes for Research, 1979.

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

10 Boulanger G and Kadushin C, eds.

36

The Vietnam Veteran

Redefined: Fact and Fiction. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates, 1986.
11 Laufer RS, Yager T, Frey-Wouters E, et al. Post-War Trauma:
Social and Psychological

Problems of Vietnam veterans in the

aftermath of the Vietnam War. New York: Center for Policy
Research, 1981. The final report to the Veterans Administration.
12 American Psychiatric Association.

Diagnostic and Statistical

Manual of Mental Disorders III (DSM-III). Washington, DC 1980.
13 Shatan CF. The Grief of Soldiers: Vietnam Combat Veterans'
Self-Help Movement. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry
1973;43(4):640-653.
14 Helzer JE, Robins LN, Davis DH. Depressive Disorders in
Vietnam Returnees.

The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease

1976;163(3):177-185.
15 Helzer JE, Robins LN, Wish E, et al. Depression in Viet Nam
Veterans and Civilian Controls. American Journal of psychiatry
1979;136(4B):526-529.
16 Laufer RS, Gallops MS, Frey-Wouters E. War Stress and Trauma:
The Vietnam Veteran Experience. Journal of Health and Social
Behavior 1984;25(1):65-85.
17 Laufer RS, Brett E, Gallops MS. Dimensions of Posttraumatic
Stress Disorder among Vietnam Veterans. The Journal of Nervous
and Mental Disease 1985;173(9):538-545.

�STRESS SYMPTOMATOLOGY

True et al.

37

IB Kadushin C, Boulanger G, Martin J. Long Term Stress Reactions:
Some Causes, Consequences, and Naturally Occurring Support
Systems. Center for Policy Research, Inc., 1981.
19 The Centers for Disease Control Vietnam Experience Study.
Postservice Mortality Among Vietnam Veterans. JAMA 1987;257(6).

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                  <text>&lt;p style="margin-top: -1em; line-height: 1.2em;"&gt;The Alvin L. Young Collection on Agent Orange comprises 120 linear feet and spans the late 1800s to 2005; however, the bulk of the coverage is from the 1960s to the 1980s and there are many undated items. The collection was donated to Special Collections of the National Agricultural Library in 1985 by Dr. Alvin L. Young (1942- ). Dr. Young developed the collection as he conducted extensive research on the military defoliant Agent Orange. The collection is in good condition and includes letters, memoranda, books, reports, press releases, journal and newspaper clippings, field logs and notebooks, newsletters, maps, booklets and pamphlets, photographs, memorabilia, and audiotapes of an interview with Dr. Young.&lt;/p&gt;&#13;
&lt;p&gt;For more about this collection, &lt;a href="/exhibits/speccoll/exhibits/show/alvin-l--young-collection-on-a"&gt;view the Agent Orange Exhibit.&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</text>
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                    <text>Item ID Number

°1849

Author

McKinlay, Sonja M.

Corporate Author

^ew England Research Institute, Inc., Watertown, Mass

ROpOrt/ArtldB Title Women's Vietnam Veterans Health Study Protocol
Development, Questionnaire, Deliverable C

Journal/Book Tltto
Year

000

°

Month/Day
Color

D

Number of Images

42

DeSCrlptOfl Notes

Contract No. V101(93)P-1138

Wednesday, July 11, 2001

Page 1850 of 1870

�WOMEN'S VIETNAM VETERANS HEALTH STUDY
PROTOCOL DEVELOPMENT

CONTRACT NO. V101(93)P-1138

QUESTIONNAIRE
DELIVERABLE C

SUBMITTED BY NEW ENGLAND RESEARCH INSTITUTE, INC.

PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
SONJA M. MCKINLAY, Ph.D.

NEW ENGLAND RESEARCH INSTITUTE, INC.'
42 Pleasant Street
Watertown, Massachusetts 02172
(617)923-7747

�QUESTIONNAIRE CONSTRUCTION

Several instruments were reviewed for possible inclusion in
the Women Veterans Health Study. Whenever possible, questions
were taken from other health studies (in particular the National
Health Interview Survey) to assure high validity and reliability.
This is most evident in the general health section as well as the
reproductive history, social support, lifestyle, and demographics
sections.
Since much of the life history events data is open-ended, a
format used successfully in the Framingham Heart Study for
hospitalizations and surgical procedures was expanded for use in
the civilian employment, military history, and marital history
sections. The pertinent hospitalizations and surgeries, as well
as the military history, will be validated using hospital and
military records respectively.
The same format was used to collect employment and military
history on the father of each pregnancy and the conception
partner sections. These have been pre-tested extensively and
have worked very well.
Several questions regarding current PTSD have been buried
throughout the instrument purposefully as part of the study
design. The CESD scale was also included as a reliable means of
assessing depression for these women in general. In addition, a
short military experience section also gathers information
relating to PTSD. The instrument by Dr. Robert Stretch,
"Vietnam-Era Nurses Adjustment Survey" provided the basis for
this section, and several questions in Stretch's instrument were
used here. This instrument is based on the Vietnam-Era Veterans
Adjustment Survey (VEVAS), which has been used in research on
other veterans, and has established reliability.

�In addition, all of the following were reviewed for this
section:
• The Stress Event Survey; Problem Checklist and
Stress Event Test (Pearce, 1985)
• The Youthful Liability Scale (Laufer, 1985)
• Independent Variable and Demographic Questionnaire
(Frye, 1982)
• Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Checklist (Ellen
Frank, University of Pittsburgh, School of Medicine,
Department of Psychiatry, 1987)
• Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder questionnaire from
the Diagnostic Interview Schedule (L.N. Robins, J.E.
Helzer and J.L. Croughan)
• Psychiatric Epidemiology Research Interview (PERI;
Laufer, 1985)
These instruments listed above (except for the problem
checklists which are duplicative of several other instruments),
were excluded due to the difficulty of administration (several
must be done in an in-person interview and/or require a
clinician's assessment) and the length of time required to
administer them. Also, given that the primary focus of this
study is on female reproductive outcomes, the scope of the study
must be limited for feasibility and to meet the time limits of a
telephone interview.
Several general health studies as well as studies of Vietnam
Veterans were reviewed for the instrument design:
•
•
•
•
•
•

The Veterans Health Survey Questionnaire for CDC
(conducted by RTI, 1985)
The Survey of Female Veterans for the VA (conducted
by Louis Harris and Associates, 1985)
The Vietnam Era Twin Study Survey of Health
The Vietnam Veterans History Questionnaire for the
VA (Foy, 1986)
The Ranch Hand Study for the USAF (1982)
The National Health Interview Survey for the U.S.
Public Health Service (1984)

�The Australian Veterans Health Studies for the
Australian Government (Australian Royal Commission,
1985)
Thesis by Gregory Paul Korgeski for the University
of Minnesota (1987) on "The Psychological,
Neurological and Medical- Correlates of Self-Reported
and Objective Ratings of Herbicide Exposure among
Vietnam Veterans."
The Women Vietnam Era Veteran's Social History Form
(Butler and Samson)
A Guide to Obtaining a Military History from Vietnam
Veterans (Scorfield and Blank)
In addition to all of those listed above, several other
instruments were reviewed specifically for the reproductive
history section. These instruments together formed the basis for
this section and pertinent topics addressed in these instruments
are covered in the protocol. In addition to instruments
developed by this project's Principal Investigator on studies of
female reproductive functioning and social support networks the
following were reviewed:
• The Reproductive Health Questionnaire for NCHS
• National Survey of Family Growth Cycles III and IV
for HHS
• Menstrual Distress Questionnaire (Moos, 1968)
• Social Support Questionnaire (Norbeck, 1983)
For the nursing section, the following were very helpful and
formed the basis for questions included in this section:
•

Protocol from the Vietnam Nurse Veteran Project
(Paul and O'Neill, 1984)
• The Staff Burnout Scale for Health Professionals by
J.W. Jones (Cronin-Stubbs, 1985)
• The Nursing Stress Scale by Gray-Toft (CroninStubbs, 1985)
• Questionnaire for Rating Stressful factors in the
ICU/CCU developed by Dr. L. Huckabay, (Norbeck,
1985)

�These instruments were provided directly from the
researchers through correspondence.

�PRE-TEST REPORT

The pre-test was conducted with 37 interviewees in four
distinct groups: (1) twenty-seven Red Cross women who served
in Vietnam; (2) one non-military nurse who served in Vietnam
with AID; (3) seven Vietnam-era veterans (both nurses and
non-nurses); and (4) two Vietnam veteran nurses.
The majority of the 37 interviews were conducted with
former Red Cross volunteers for two major reasons: (1) the
similar exposure (i.e., Vietnam experience) and, (2) the
fact that this group will not be eligible for the Women
Veterans Health Study and therefore would not reduce the
sample of interest.
In order to pre-test the specific military and nursing
sections however, a small number of Vietnam and Vietnam-era
veterans were included. These names were made available
through consultants on the project who are Vietnam and
Vietnam-era veterans themselves. The names came from
veterans organizations and the American Nurses' Association.
The number of women from these groups was purposely small so
that very few would have to be eliminated from the proposed
study.
The instrument went through several different
modifications during the pre-test, and feedback was
requested from interviewers and interviewees in an effort to
improve the instrument. On the whole, the interview was
well-received. Respondents felt that it was thorough,
comprehensive and neither offensive nor intrusive. The
utilization of professionally-trained interviewers with
several years of interviewing experience was certainly an
important factor in this assessment.

�The interview was always conducted at a convenient time
for the respondent and for the majority, a specific
appointment time was made due to the length of time required
to administer the initial versions of the instrument. The
average length of time required to administer the instrument
across all four groups was 69.61 minutes. The average was
71.20 for the Red Cross group; 85 minutes for the two
Vietnam veteran nurses; 44 minutes for the one AID nurse;
and 63 minutes for the seven Vietnam-era veterans (nurses
and non-nurses).

�INSTRUMENT BIBLIOGRAPHY

NOTE:

The articles cited in this Bibliography provided the basis
for correspondence with the individual researchers. We
requested copies of the actual questionnaires or
instruments used in their research. The researchers were
extremely helpful and provided us with copies of their
protocols for our review.

�REFERENCES

Australian Royal Commission, "Royal Commission on the use and
effects of chemical agents on Australian personnel in
Vietnam", Australian Govt. Publish. Serv., Canberra, 1985.
Cronin-Stubbs, D., Schaffner, J.W., "Professional impairment:
Strategies for managing the troubled nurse", NAQ. 1985,
9(3), 44-54.
Epidemiologic Investigation of Health Effects in Air Force
Personnel Following Exposure to Herbicides; Baseline
Questionnaire, USAF School of Aerospace Medicine (1982).
Foy, D.W., Sipprelle, R.C., Rueger, D.B., Carroll, E.M.,
"Etiology of posttraumatic stress disorder in Vietnam
veterans: Analysis of premilitary, military, and combat
exposure influences", Jnl. of Consulting &amp; Clinical
Psychology. 1984, 52, 79-87.
Frye, J.S., Stockton, R.A., "Discriminant analysis of
posttraumatic stress disorder among a group of Vietnam
veterans", Am. J. Psychiatry, 1982, 139(1), 52-56.
Gray-Toft, P., Anderson, J.G., "Stress among hospital nursing
staff: Its causes and effects", Soc. Sci. and Med.. 1981,
15A, 639-647.
Korgeski, G.P., Leon, G.R., "Correlates of self reported and
objectively determined exposure to Agent Orange", American
Journal of Psychiatry. 1983, 140(11), 1443-1449.
Laufer, R., "War trauma and human development: The Vietnam
experience", The Trauma of War: Stress &amp; Rec in V. Vets.,
Sonnenberg, S.M., Blank, A.S., Talbott, J.A., Am.
Psychiatric Press Inc., 1985, 33-55.
Moos, Rudolf H., "The Development of a Menstrual Distress
Questionnaire", Psychosomatic Medicine. Vol. XXX, No. 6,
1968.
Norbeck, J.S., Tilden, V.P., "Life stress, social support, and
emotional disequilibrium in complications of pregnancy: A
prospective, multivariate study", Jnl. of Health and Social
Behavior. 1983, 24, 30-46.

Norbeck, J.S., "Perceived job stress, job satisfaction, and
psychological symptoms, in critical care nursing", Research
in Nursing and Health. 1985, 8, 253-259.
Paul, E.A., "Wounded healers: A summary of the Vietnam nurse
project", Military Medicine. 1985, 150(11), 571-576.

�Pearce, K.A., "A study of posttraumatic stress disorder in
Vietnam veterans", J. of Clinical Psychology. 1985, 41(1),
9-14.
Robbins, L.N., Helzer, J.E., "Drug use among Vietnam veterans three years later", Med. World News. 1975, Oct. 27, 44-49.
Robins, L.N., Helzer, J.E., Davis, D.H., "Narcotic use in
Southeast Asia and afterward", Archives of General
Psychiatry. 1975, 32, 955-961.
Robins, L.N., Helzer, J.E., Croughan, J., Ratcliff, K.S.: "The
NIMH Diagnostic Interview Schedule": Archives of General
Psychiatry. 1981, 38, 381-389.
Stretch, R.H., Vail, J.D., Maloney, J.P., "Posttrauraatic stress
disorder among army nurse corps in Vietnam veterans", J. of
Consulting &amp; Clinical Psych.. 1985, 53(5), 704-708.

�WOMEN'S VETERAN HEAIJIH STODY

QUESTIONNAIRE

�GENERAL HEALTH SECTION

First, I have some general health questions to ask you.
1.

Would you say your health in general is:
1.

Excellent

2. Very good
3. Good
4. Fair, or
5.
9.

2.

Poor
DK

Overall, how much do you worry about your health:
1. Not at all

2. Very little
3.

Some of the time, or

4. Most of the time
9.

DK

In the past 2 weeks, have you had any illness, accident or
injury which has restricted your usual activities?
YES

1. NO

2.

9. DK

3.1 How many days altogether were your usual
activities restricted by illness, accident or
injury in the past 2 weeks?

DAYS
3.2 What was the reason (or reasons) for this
limitation?

�I will read you a list of common problems which affect us from time
to time in our daily lives. Thinking back over the past two weeks.
have you been bothered by any of the following?
EQ

IBS

£K

a. Dizzy spells

1

2

9

b.

1

2

9

c. Diarrhea
d. Constipation
e. Persistent cough

1
1
1

2
2
2

9
9
9

f.

Feeling blue or depressed

1

2

9

g.

Backaches or lower back pain

1

2

9

h. Anxiety
i. Upset stomach

1
1

2
2

9
9

j . Headaches

1

2

9

k. Night sweats
1. Aches/stiffness in joints

1
1

2
2

9
9

m.

1

2

9

n. Sore throat
o. Loss of appetite
p. Menstrual problems

1
1
1

2
2
2

9
9
9

q. Fluid (water) retention
r. Difficulty in concentrating

1
1

2
2

9
9

s. Nervous tension

1

2

9

t. Urinary tract/bladder infections

1

2

9

u. Trouble with bladder control/frequency

1

2

9

v. Rapid heartbeat

1

2

9

w. Hot flushes/flashes

1

2

9

x. Nightmares

1

2

9

y. Trouble sleeping or insomnia

1

2

9

z.

1

2

9

aa. Depression

1

2

9

bb. Forgetfulness

1

2

9

Lack of energy

'Pins and needles' in hands or feet

Irritability

IF YES TO ANY ASK:

Why do you think you've had these problems lately?

�5. Compared with persons of your own age and sex, how would you rate
your risk of having a heart attack or stroke within the next ten
years?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
9.

Much lower than average
Somewhat lower than average
About average
Somewhat higher than average, or
Much higher than average
DK

6. Do you know approximately what your blood pressure is?
SYSTOLIC

DIASTOLIC

DK - 999

DK - 999

7. Do you know approximately what the level of cholesterol in your blood
is?
mg/dl
DK - 999

8. How tall are you in your stocking/bare feet without shoes?
round to the nearest inch.

FT.
IN.
DK - 999

Please

INCHES

9. How much do you weigh in light indoor clothing without shoes?
round to the nearest pound.

POUNDS
DK - 999

Please

�10.

Excluding weight gains due to pregnancy, since you were 21, have
you ever weighed 20 or more pounds over your current weight?
1. NO

2.

YES

10.1 When was that?

(PROBE FOR YEAR(S) AND
CIRCUMSTANCES)

10.2 What is the most you have ever weighed?

POUNDS

DK - 999

11.

Since you were 21, have you ever weighed 20 or more pounds under
your current weight?
1. NO

2.

YES

11.1

When was that?

(PROBE FOR YEAR(S) AND
CIRCUMSTANCES)

11.2

What is the least you have ever weighed?

POUNDS
DK - 999

�CIVILIAN EMPLOYMENT HISTORY

In order to get a complete picture of you as an individual, we need to
collect a complete history on several areas of your life. I'd like to
start with your civilian employment history.
1.

What have you been doing for most of the past 12 months -- were
you in the military, working at a non-military job for pay, going
to school, or doing something else?

1. SOMETHING ELSE

2.
3.

IN THE MILITARY
I
GOING TO SCHOOL

4. WORKING
AT A JOB
FOR PAY

V
1. What were you doing?
01. RETIRED
02. LAID OFF
03. LOOKING FOR WORK
04. KEEPING HOUSE
05. ILL

06. DISABLED
07. VOLUNTEER WORK

08. OTHER (SPECIFY):

2.

Excluding active duty while in the military, have
you ever worked at a job for pay?
1. NO
9. DK

V
SKIP TO
NEXT
SECTION

2.

YES

2.1 Excluding jobs before you were 21 years old
and excluding active duty in the military,
let's begin with your first job after you
reached 21.
IF NO PAID JOBS AFTER 21 YEARS OF AGE
SKIP TO NEXT SECTION

�2.1 FOR EACH JOB ASK:

(a) What were the dates of your employment for that job?
(b) Was that full-time (35 hours or more per week) or part-time «35
hours per week)?
(c) What type of work did you do? What, specifically, were your job
duties? FOR NURSES ASK: What was your specialty? What type of
ward did you work on?
(d) What type of an organization did you work for? (Was it a
hospital, company, university, etc.?) And, in what city and
state was it located?
(e) IF NOT CURRENTLY WORKING AT THAT JOB, ASK: Why did that job end?
(b)
FT PT

(a)
DATE S

JOB
#

1

TO

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

2

YEAR

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

1

3

2

1

2

1

2

1

TO

2

1

TO

2

V.

4

TO

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

5

'

TO

TO

6

MONTH

YEAR

(c)
TYPE OF WORK

�IF NURSE:
SPECIALTY WARDS

(d)
ORGANIZATION
CITY, STATE

(e)
WHY LEFT

�2.

(CONT.) FOR EACH JOB ASK:
(a) What were the dates of your employment for that job?
(b) Was that full-time (35 hours or more per week) or part-time « 35
hours per week)?
(c) What type of work did you do? What, specifically, were your job
duties? FOR NURSES ASK: What was your specialty? What type of
ward did you work on?
(d) What type of an organization did you work for? (Was it a
hospital, company, university, etc.?) And, in what city and
state was it located?
(e) IF NOT CURRENTLY WORKING AT THAT JOB, ASK: Why did that job end?

7

(b)
FT FT

(a)
DATE S

JOB
#

1
MONTH

1

8
YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

9

1

1

MONTH

2

YEAR

1MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

12

2

YEAR

TO

11

2

1

MONTH

TO

10

2

YEAR

TO

MONTH

2

1

MONTH

2

1

TO

YEAR

TO

(c)
TYPE OF WORK

�(d)
IF NURSE:
SPECIALTY WARDS

10

11

12

ORGANIZATION
CITY, STATE

(e)
WHY LEFT

�2.

(CONT.) FOR EACH JOB ASK:
(a) What were the dates of your employment for that job?
(b) Was that full-time (35 hours or more per week) or part-time «35
hours per week)?
(c) What type of work did you do? What, specifically, were your job
duties? FOR NURSES ASK: What was your specialty? What type of
ward did you work on?
(d) What type of an organization did you work for? (Was it a
hospital, company, university, etc.?) And, in what city and
state was it located?
(e) IF NOT CURRENTLY WORKING AT THAT JOB, ASK: Why did that job end?
(b)
FT PT

(a)
DATES

JOE
#
13

TO
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

]
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

14

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

1MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

15

1

1

16

17

18

TO

2

1

TO

2

1

TO

2

1

TO

2

2

(c)
TYPE OF WORK

�(e)
IF NURSE:
SPECIALTY WARDS

13

14

15

16

17

18

ORGANIZATION
CITY, STATE

WHY LEFT

�MARITAL HISTORY

The next section asks for a complete marital history.
1. Have you ever been legally married?
1. NO

2. YES

1.1 What is your current marital status, are you:
1. Married and living with your spouse
2. Separated
3. Divorced, or
4. Widowed
1.2 How many times have you been legally married in your
entire life?

ENTER #

GO TO MARITAL HISTORY SECTION AND RECORD MARRIAGES
UNTIL YOU REACH THE # ENTERED ABOVE.

�2.

(a) What were the dates of your marriage?
(b) IF NOT CURRENTLY IN THAT MARRIAGE, ASK: Did that marriage end in
divorce, a legal separation, the death of your spouse, or in some
other way? REPEAT FOR ALL MARRIAGES.
(b)

(a)
MARRIAG E
#

DA

REASON FOR END
OF MARRIAGE

TO

(1)
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

(2)

TO

(3)

TO

()
4

TO

(5)

TO

()
6

�REPRODUCTIVE HISTORY

The next set of questions ask for a complete reproductive history.
1. Have you ever taken any form of birth control pills?

1.

NO

9.

D,K

SKIP TO
QUESTION # 2

2.

YES
l.la

How old were you when you first began taking birth
control pills? (b) What year was that?

YEARS

(a)
1.2

(b) 19

Are you taking birth control pills now?

1. NO

2.

YES
1.2a

What brand are you currently
using?

(BRAND NAME)

I SKIP TO QUESTION # 1.4 I
1.3

How long ago did you last take birth control pills?
01.&lt; 1 MONTH
02.&gt; 1 MONTH; &lt;; 1 YEAR AGO
03.&gt; 1 YEAR;

&lt;; 5 YEARS AGO

04.&gt; 5 YEARS; &lt; 10 YEARS AGO
05.&gt; 10 YEARS; &lt;^ 20 YEARS AGO
06.&gt; 20 YEARS AGO

1.4

As best as you can remember, I'd like to know all of
the specific years or time periods when you used birth
control pills, and the brand you used.

�2. Have you ever used an IUD?

1.

NO

9.

DK

SKIP TO
QUESTION # 3

2.

YES

2.la How old were you when you first used an
IUD? (b) What year was that?

(a)
2.2

YEARS

(b)

19

How long ago did you last use an IUD?
01. CURRENTLY USING; &lt; 1 MONTH
02. &gt; 1 MONTH; &lt; 1 YEAR AGO
03. &gt; YEAR; &lt;5 YEARS AGO
04. &gt; 5 YEARS; &lt; 10 YEARS AGO
05. &gt; 10 YEARS; &lt; 20 YEARS AGO
06. &gt; 20 YEARS AGO

2.3

As best as you can remember, I'd like to know
all of the specific years or time periods when
you used an IUD, and the brand you used.

�3. Have you ever tried to conceive a child for a period of 12 months
or more and been unable to get pregnant?

1.

NO

9.

2.

YES

DK

I
I
SKIP TO Q # 4.1
I
4. Have you ever been in a relationship where you were having

intercourse
regularly (on a weekly basis) without using birth control for a period of
12 consecutive months or more without conceiving?

1.

NO

2.

I

4.1

YES

4 old were you when this first happened?
How

IF NO TO Q #
3 +4
SKIP TO
QUESTION # 8

YEARS
4.2

How long did this continue for?

MONTHS
4.3

1.

1.

YEARS

Did you or your partner ever discuss this with a health
professional or have any testing to determine why you
did not conceive?

NO

2.

YES

i
4.3a

4.4

OR

What types of tests did you and/or your
partner have?

Were you or your partner ever treated by a health
professional for this?

NO

2. YES

,1.

4T4a

As best as you can remember, I'd like
to know what types of treatments were
prescribed for you and/or for your
partner?

4.4b

What was the outcome of the
treatments?

�CONCEPTION PARTNER SECTION

I'd like to ask you a few questions about the man you were in a relationship
with when you did not conceive after 12 months. [REPEAT QUESTIONS 1 - 7 FOR
EACH MAN WITH WHOM RESPONDENT WAS IN A RELATIONSHIP FOR 12 MONTHS WITHOUT
CONCEPTION.]

*

AT END, ASK:

Did you ever try to conceive for 12 months or more with any
other man or were you having regular intercourse for 12
consecutive months (on a weekly basis) with any other man
without using birth control and without becoming pregnant?
(IF YES, REPEAT CONCEPTION PARTNER SECTION.)

1. What is his date of birth?

First the month, then the day and year.

9.

DAY

MONTH

DK

YEAR

2. Did he ever serve in the military?

1.

NO

9. DK

\

2.

YES

I

2.1 Did he ever serve in Vietnam?

9.

I
DK

SKIP TO QUESTION # 3

Now, I'd like to get his complete military service history while in Vietnam,
for each tour of duty, beginning with his first tour in Vietnam. Please tell
me where he served and for how long. Please include both temporary and
permanent tours of duty.
(REPEAT UNTIL COMPLETE MILITARY HISTORY FOR ALL BRANCHES SERVED IN)

�2.1 (a) What branch did he serve in?
2.1 (b) Where was he stationed? (COUNTRY AND AREA)
2.1 (c) For how long?
2.1 (d) What was his rank during that time?
2.1 (e) What was his assignment?
2.1 (f) FOR DOCTORS, NURSES AND MEDICS, ASK: What
was his military occupational specialty?
What hospital was he assigned to? What type
of ward did he work on?
(a)
BRANCH

(d)
RANK

(c)
TIME

(b)
WHERE

TO

MONTH

MONTH YEAR

YEAR

TO

MONTH YEAR

MONTH YEAR

TO

MONTH YEAR

MONTH YEAR

TO

MONTH YEAR

MONTH YEAR

TO

MONTH YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

MONTH YEAR

�(f)
FOR DOCTORS/
NURSES AND
MEDICS:

(e)
ASSIGNMENT

SPECIALTY

HOSPITAL
NAME

TYPE OF
WARD

1

�3.

Did he ever work in the manufacture or packaging of chemicals?
1.
9.

NC
DB

2.

SKIP TO
QUESTION # 4

YES

(a) What were the dates of his employment in that
type of occupation?
(b) Was that full-time (35 hours or more per week)
or part-time « 35 hours per week)?
(c) What type of work did he do? What,
specifically, were his job duties?
(d) What was the name of the company he worked for?
(e) What was the address of the company he worked
for? I need the street, the city, state, and
zip code, if you know it.
(a)
DATES

JOB

(b)
FT PT

TO
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

1

TO

2

1

TO

2

1

TO

2

1

TO

2

()
c
TYPE OF WORK

�(d)
NAME OF COMPANY

(e)
STREET ADDRESS (CITY, STATE, ZIP)

�4. Did he ever work in the field of agriculture?
1.
9.

YES

Np
DK

SKIP TO
QUESTION # 5

I

(a) What were the dates of his employment in that type
of occupation?
(b) Was that full-time (35 hours or more per week) or
part-time « 35 hours per week)?
(c) What type of work did he do? What, specifically, were
his job duties?
(d) What was the name of the company he worked for?
(e) What was the address of the company he worked for? I
need the street, the city, state, and zip code, if you
know it.
(a)
DATE S

JOB

(b)
FT PT

TO
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

1

1

2

1

2

1

2

YEAR

MONTH

2

YEAR

MONTH

2

1

MONTH

YEAR

TO

TO

TO
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

(c)
TYPE OF WORK

�(d)

(e)

NAME OF COMPANY

STREET ADDRESS (CITY, STATE, ZIP)

�5. Did he ever work In forestry?
1. N,0
9. DK

YES

SKIP TO
INTERVIEWER
CHECK AT THE
TOP OF
QUESTION # 6

I

(a) What were the dates of his employment in that type
of occupation?
(b) Was that full-time (35 hours or more per week) or
part-time « 35 hours per week)?
(c) What type of work did he do? What, specifically, were
his job duties?
(d) What was the name of the company he worked for?
(e) What was the address of the company he worked for? I
need the street, the city, state, and zip code, if you
know it.
(a)

JOB

(b)
FT PT

DATES

1

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

1

MONTH

YEAR

1

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

2

YEAR

MONTH

2

YEAR

MONTH

2

YEAR

MONTH

2

1

MONTH

2

1

TO
MONTH

TO

TO

TO

TO

(c)
TYPE OF WORK

�(d)
NAME OF COMPANY

(e)
STREET ADDRESS (CITY, STATE, ZIP)

�INTERVIEWER NOTE! ASK ONLY IF CURRENTLY MARRIED TO THIS MAN

6.

What Is his most recent occupation?

What specifically does he do?

7.

What was his usual occupation for most of the past 20 years?
specifically did he do for most of that time?

What

�8. Have you ever been pregnant?
1. NO
9.

DK

SKIP TO
MENSTRUAL
HISTORY

2,

YES

I

8.1 Are you currently pregnant?
1. NO
I
9. DK

YES
*
8.la What month of the pregnancy are you in?
2.

WEEKS
MONTH

8.2 Altogether, how many times (including this
pregnancy) have you ever been pregnant?

INTERVIEWER NOTE:
TIMESIF CURRENTLY PREGNANT FOR
THE FIRST TIME. SKIP TO
MENSTRUAL HISTORY SECTION,

GO TO PREGNANCY HISTORY AND RECORD
PREGNANCIES UNTIL YOU REACH THE #
ENTERED ABOVE

�PREGNANCY HISTORY

I'd now like to ask you a series of questions about your pregnancy.
time?

1. In what year did you become pregnant for the

19

YEAR

2. How long did the pregnancy last?

WEEKS

3. What was the outcome of this pregnancy?
1.

ECTOPIC PREGNANCY

3.

STILL BIRTH

4.

LIVE BIRTH

5.

*SKIP TO.QUESTION # 3 . 1

MISCARRIAGE (SPONTANEOUS ABORTION)

2.

[CODE RED]

INDUCED ABORTION:

*SKIP TO QUESTION # 14

SKIP TO QUESTION # 4

(a) Could you please tell me why you had the abortion, or how you
came to the decision to have the abortion?

(b) Was there any indication that the fetus was malformed?
1. NO
9. DK

SKIP TO QUESTION # 14

2.

YES

[CODE RED]

�(c) Could you please tell me when the abortion took place?

19
MONTH

YEAR

(d) I'd also like to know the name and address of the hospital and
the doctor who treated you.

HOSPITAL NAME

STREET ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

ZIP

STATE

ZIP

DOCTOR'S NAME

STREET ADDRESS

CITY

SKIP TO QUESTION # 14

�3.1 Were you told by a physician that the miscarriage was caused by:
[READ a - b]
NO

YES

DK

a . A congenital malformation?

2

9

b . A hydatidiform mole?

3.2

1
1

2

9

I'd also like to know the name and addresses
of the hospital and the doctor who treated
you.

HOSPITAL NAME

STREET ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

ZIP

DOCTOR'S NAME

STREET ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

ZIP

�3.3 Were you or your partner given any information by a physician about
why you may have had the miscarriage?
1. NO
9. DK

2. YES
I
3.3.1 What were you told?

3.4 Did you or your partner ever go for genetic counseling or have any tests
to determine why you had the miscarriage?
1. NO
9. DK

2. YES
i
3.4.1 What types of tests were done and what was the outcome
of the testing?

3.5 Did this miscarriage occur after amniocentesis or other similar test
procedures?
1. NO
9. DK

2. YES

*

3.5.1 What tests were you given?
1. AMNIOCENTESIS
2. OTHER (SPECIFY:

3.6 Why do you think you had the miscarriage?
9. DK

SKIP TO
QUESTION # 14

�INTERVIEWER NOTE:

FOR MULTIPLE BIRTHS (TWINS, TRIPLETS,
ETC.) RECORD FOR EACH CHILD.

4. Was this child male or female?
1. MALE

2. FEMALE

5. How much did the child weigh at birth?

POUNDS

OUNCES

6. Did this child have any birth defects or abnormalities when s/he was born?
1. NO

2. YES

6.1 Please describe the birth defect or abnormality.
(any others?)

6.2 Could I please have the name, address, city, state and
zip code of the physician who diagnosed your child's
abnormality or handicap, and the hospital at which the
diagnosis was made?
NAME OF DOCTOR

ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

ZIP

STATE

ZIP

NAME OF HOSPITAL

ADDRESS

CITY

�7. Was this a forceps delivery?
1. NO

2. YES

9. DK

8. Did you smoke at all during this pregnancy?
1. NO
I
9. DK

2. YES
v
8.1 How many cigarettes per day on the average did you smoke
during this pregnancy?

CIGARETTES PER DAY
9. Did you drink alcoholic beverages at all during this pregnancy?
1. NO

2. YES

9. DK

9.1 About how often did you drink alcoholic beverages on the
average during this pregnancy?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Less
Less
1 or
3 or
5 or

than once a month
than once a week
2 days a week
4 days a week
more days a week

10. Did you have any of the following complications during this pregnancy, as
a result of the pregnancy?
[READ a-d, FOR EACH YES, ASK: During which month or months of the pregnancy
did you have this?]

PK

N_Q

YES

a. Toxemia

1

2

9

b. Diabetes

1

2

9

c. High Blood Pressure

1

2

9

d. Spotting (Vaginal bleeding)... 1

2

9

MONTHS

�11. Did you have any other complications during this pregnancy?

1. NO
I
9. DK

2. YES
*
11.1 What complications?

INTERVIEWER NOTE:

FOR STILLBIRTHS, SKIP TO QUESTION # 14

�QUESTIONS 12 AND 13
FOR LIVE BIRTHS ONLY:

12a.

How old is this child now?

OR

8. DECEASED
YEARS

MONTHS

v

12.1 How old was your child when
s/he died?

YEARS

MONTHS

13.

Did this child ever develop any abnormalities, handicaps or learning
disabilities which were diagnosed?

1. NO

2.

9.

13.1

DK
I

SKIP TO
QUESTION
# 14

YES

I you told that your child had a learning disorder or
Were
disability of any type?
1.

NO

2. YES

9.

DK

13.1.1 How old wsis the child wh
appeared?

*

SKIP TO
Q # 13.2

OR
MONTHS

YEARS

�13.1.2 What specific type of disability were you told your
child had? [CIRCLE ALL THAT APPLY]
a. HYPERACTIVITY
b. EXCITABILITY
c. ATTENTION DEFICIT DISORDER
d. DYSLEXIA
e. OTHER (SPECIFY):

13.1.3 In what specific area of learning is the
disability?

13.1.4 Who diagnosed the problem?

[CIRCLE ALL THAT APPLY]

01. SPECIAL EDUCATION TEACHER
02. PEDIATRICIAN
03. PH.D. CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGIST
04. SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGIST (M.A.)
05. NEUROLOGIST
06. CHILD PSYCHIATRIST

07. OTHER (SPECIFY:;

�13.1.5 Could I please have the name, address, city, state and
zip code of the professional who diagnosed your child's
learning abnormality, and the year in which the
diagnosis was made?

NAME OF DOCTOR

ADDRESS

CITY

ZIP

STATE

1 9

YEAR DIAGNOSED

13.1.6 Were you told that your child's disability was
neurologically based?
1. NO

2. YES

9. DK

13.1.7 Were you told that your child's disability was
emotionally based?
1. NO

2. YES

9. DK

13.1.8 What were you told was the cause of the learning
disability?

�13.2

Were you told that your child had any abnormalities or handicaps
other than learning disabilities?

1. NO

2. YES

9. DK

13.2.1 How old was the child when this first appeared?

I

4-

13.2.2

What abnormalities or handicaps did s/he develop?

13.2.3

What were you told was the cause of the abnormality
or handicap?

13.2.4 Who diagnosed the problem?

[CIRCLE ALL THAT APPLY]

01. PEDIATRICIAN
02. NEUROLOGIST
03. CHILD PSYCHIATRIST

04. OTHER (SPECIFY:)

13.2.5

Could I please have the name, address, city, state and
zip code of the professional who diagnosed your child's
abnormality or handicap, and the year in which the
diagnosis was made?
NAME OF DOCTOR

ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

19

ZIP

YEAR DIAGNOSED

�ASK EVERYONE

14. Were you or your partner using any form of birth control when you became
pregnant the
time?
1. NO
9. DK

2.

YES

I

14.1

What type of birth control were you or your partner using
at the time? (CIRCLE ALL THAT APPLY)
01. BIRTH CONTROL PILLS
02. IUD

03. DIAPHRAGM
04. SPERMICIDAL JELLY
05. SPERMICIDAL FOAM
06. CONDOMS
07. CERVICAL CAP
08. CERVICAL SPONGE
09. DOUCHING AS A FORM OF BIRTH CONTROL
10. NATURAL FAMILY PLANNING (BASAL TEMPERATURE AND/OR
CERVICAL MUCUS TEST)
11. RHYTHM
12. TUBAL LIGATION
13. VASECTOMY
14. OTHER (SPECIFY):

GO TO FATHER OF PREGNANCY SECTION

�FATHER OF PREGNANCY SECTION

I'd like to ask you a few questions about the man who fathered the pregnancy.
1.

What is the father's date of birth? First the month, then the day and
year.

MONTH

YEAR

DAY

INTERVIEWER CHECK: IF SAME MAN AS PREVIOUS PREGNANCY, CHECK BOX
AND SKIP TO NEXT PREGNANCY. AT END OF PREGNANCY
SECTION, SKIP TO MENSTRUAL HISTORY.

2.

Did he ever serve in the military?
1.

NO

9.

DK

I

2.

YES

^

2.1 Did he ever serve in Vietnam?
1. NO

2. YES

*

\/

9. DK

SKIP TO QUESTION # 3

Now, I'd like to get his complete military service history while in Vietnam,
for each tour of duty, beginning with his first tour in Vietnam. Please
tell me where he served and for how long. Please include both temporary and
permanent tours of duty.
(REPEAT UNTIL COMPLETE MILITARY HISTORY FOR ALL BRANCHES SERVED IN)

�2.1 (a) What branch did he serve in?
2.1 (b) Where was he stationed? (COUNTRY AND AREA)
2.1 (c) For how long?
2.1 (d) What was his rank during that time?
2.1 (e) What was his assignment?
2.1 (f) FOR DOCTORS, NURSES AND MEDICS, ASK: What was
his military occupational specialty? What hospital was
he assigned to? What type of ward did he work on?
(a)
BRANCH

(b)

(d)

(c)
TIME

WHERE

RANK

TO
MONTH

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

MONTH YEAR

YEAR

YEAR

TO
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

TO

MONTH YEAR

TO
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

�(f)
FOR DOCTORS/
NURSES AND
MEDICS:

(e)
ASSIGNMENT

| SPECIALTY

HOSPITAL
NAME

TYPE OF
WARD

�3.

Did he ever work in the manufacture or packaging of chemicals?
1. NO

2.

YES

DK
SKIP TO
QUESTION # 4

v
(a) What were the dates of his employment in that type
of occupation?
(b) Was that full-time (35 hours or more per week) or
part-time « 35 hours per week)?
(c) What type of work did he do? What, specifically, were
his job duties?
(d) What was the name of the company he worked for?
(e) What was the address of the company he worked for? I
need the street, the city, state, and zip code, if
you know it.
(a)
DATE S

JOB

(b)
FT PT

1

1

1

MONTH

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

2

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

2

YEAR

TO

MONTH

2

YEAR

MONTH

2

1

MONTH

YEAR

2

1

TO

MONTH

TO

TO

TO

(c)
TYPE OF WORK

�(d)
NAME OF COMPANY

(e)
STREET ADDRESS (CITY, STATE, ZIP)

�4.

Did he ever work in the field of agriculture?
1. NO
9.

2. YES

DK

SKIP TO
QUESTION # 5

(a) What were the dates of his employment in that type
of occupation?
(b) Was that full-time (35 hours or more per week) or
part-time « 35 hours per week)?
(c) What type of work did he do? What, specifically, were
his job duties?
(d) What was the name of the company he worked for?
(e) What was the address of the company he worked for? I
need the street, the city, state, and zip code, if
you know it.
(a)

JOB

(b)
FT FT

DATES

TO
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

1

1

1

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

2

1

TO
YEAR

2

2

YEAR

TO

MONTH

2

YEAR

MONTH

2

1

MONTH

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

TO

(c)
TYPE OF WORK

�(d)
NAME OF COMPANY

(e)
STREET ADDRESS (CITY, STATE, ZIP)

�5.

Did he ever work in forestry?
1. NO
9.

2.

YES

DK

v

\U

SKIP TO
INTERVIEWER
CHECK AT TOP
OF QUESTION
# 6

(a) What were the dates of his employment in that type
of occupation?
(b) Was that full-time (35 hours or more per week) or
part-time « 35 hours per week)?
(c) What type of work did he do? What, specifically, were
his job duties?
(d) What was the name of the company he worked for?
(e) What was the address of the company he worked for? I
need the street, the city, state, and zip code, if
you know it.
(a)
DATES

JOB

(b)
FT PT

TO

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR-

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

1

TO

2

1

TO

2

1

TO

2

1

TO

2

(c)
TYPE OF WORK

�(d)
NAME OF COMPANY

(e)
STREET ADDRESS (CITY, STATE, ZIP)

�INTERVIEWER NOTE!

ASK ONLY IF CURRENTLY MARRIED TO THIS MAN

6.

What is his most recent occupation?

What specifically does he do?

7.

What was his usual occupation for most of the past 20 years?
specifically did he do for most of that time?

What

�MENSTRUAL HISTORY
I'd now like to get a complete menstrual history from you.
l.a. How old were you when your period (or menstrual cycles) started?
year was that?
YEARS

(b) What

19

2.a.

When you first began menstruating, did you experience any of the following?
[READ a - k]

2.b.

Over the course of your menstrual history have you experienced any of the
following?

2.c.

FOR EACH YES TO 2.b, ASK: When was this most severe?
NO

(2a)
YES

DK

NO

(2b)
YES

DK

a.

Severe cramps

. 1

2

9

1

2

9

b

A heavy flow

. 1

2

9

1

2

9

o.

Nausea or vomiting. . . . 1
.

2

9

1

2

9

d.

A very short period
(3 days or less)

. 1

2

9

1

2

9

A very lengthy period
. 1
(7 or more days)

2

9

1

2

9

e.

f.

Periods of Amenorrhea
(loss of periods not
caused by pregnancy)... 1

g. A regular but very
short cycle « 28 days) 1

9

h. A regular but very
long cycle (&gt;35 days). 1

9

i.

j.
k.

An irregular menstrual
cycle anywhere between
26 - 40+ days apart
with no pattern
1

2

2

Clotting during your
period

2

2

1

Premenstrual symptoms
(such as breast tenderness or irritability).. 1

&lt;2c)
YEARS

�3.

Have you had a period in the past 12 months?

1.

NO

2.

YES
V
3.1 About how long ago was your last period?
01.

HAVING IT NOW
\

02.&lt; 1 MONTH AGO OR SLIGHTLY LONGER THAN 30 DAYS
BUT STILL REGULARLY MENSTRUATING.
03.&gt; 1; &lt; 3 MONTHS AGO
0 . 3; &lt;. 6 MONTHS AGO
4&gt;
05.&gt; 6; &lt;.9 MONTHS AGO
06.&gt; 9; _&lt; 12 MONTHS AGO

SKIP TO QUESTION # 6

4.

V
Have your periods stopped?
1.

NO

2.

YES
4.1

What caused your periods to stop?
01. PREGNANCY/LACTATION
02. SURGERY
03. NATURAL (NON-SURGICAL) MENOPAUSE
04. RADIATION OR CHEMOTHERAPY
05. OTHER CAUSE (SPECIFY):

99. DK

�5. About how old were you when you had your last period?

YEARS

6. What was the date your last period started?

MONTH

DAY

YEAR

7. When was the last time you had a Pap Test (Pap Smear)?

1.

NEVER

9.

MONTH
9.

DK

YEAR

DK

8.1
SKIP TO
NEXT
SECTION

How often do you usually have a Pap Test?
01. AT LEAST ONCE EVERY 6 MONTHS;
02.

AT LEAST ONCE A YEAR;

03.

AT LEAST ONCE EVERY OTHER YEAR;

04.

AT LEAST ONCE EVERY FIVE YEARS;

05.

AT LEAST ONCE EVERY TEN YEARS;

06.

AT LEAST ONCE EVERY 20 YEARS;

07.

OTHER (SPECIFY):

�MEDICAL HISTORY
I'd now like to get a complete medical history from you.
1. (a)

Has a doctor or other health professional ever told you that
you had any of the following? [READ a - f f . ]

FOR EACH YES, ASK:
(b) When was this first diagnosed? (YEAR)
(c) Do you still have: ?
(d) Have vou been treated for

in the tiast 6 months?

(a)

NO

(b)

DK YES

(c)
HAS

(d)
TREATMENT

(YEAR)

NO YES DK

NO

YES DK

a. High blood pressure
(hypertension)

1 9 2

1 2 9

1 2 9

b. Heart disease (inc., heart
attack, heart failure,
rapid heart, angina)

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

c. Diabetes (high blood sugar) 1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

2

9

d. Stroke or hemorrhage
o f t h e brain
e. Convulsions o r seizures

1

9

2

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

f. A n y disease o f t h e pancreas 1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

g- Arthritis o r rheumatism

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

h. Non-Hodgkins lymphoma

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

j . Fibrocystic breast disease

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

k. A pelvic infection or
pelvic inflammatory
disease (PID)

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

2

9

i. Cancer (IF YES, SPECIFY)

1. Abnormal P a p Smear

1

9

2

�(a)
NO DK YES

(YEAR)

(d)

(c)
HAS

(b)

NO YES

TREATMENT

DK

NO YES DK

m. Gonorrhea

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

n. Syphilis

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

t. Urinary tract
infections

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

u. Gallstones or any gall
bladder problems

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

Any chronic stomach
problems (ulcer,
gastrointestinal
bleeding, colitis)

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

z. Skin rashes

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

aa. Asthma

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

bb. Acne or chloracne

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

cc. Alcoholism

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

0.

Genital herpes

P- Any other sexually
transmitted disease
(IF YES, SPECIFY:)

q-

Trichomoniasis

r. Vaginal warts
s . Recurrent vaginal

infections

V.

w. Allergies
X.

y.

Any liver problems
(SPECIFY)

Thyroid problems
(SPECIFY)

�(a)

(d)

(c)

(b)

TREATMENT

HAS

NO

DK YES

(YEAR)

NO YES

DK

NO

YES DK

dd. Drug Addiction

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

ee. Hepatitis

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

1

9

2

1

2

9

1

2

9

ff. Any others (SPECIFY)

�We also need to know if you have ever used medications.
of common medications.

I am going to read a list

2. For each one, please tell me if you have ever taken it. If you have taken it,
I'd like to know when you took it and for how long. (From when to when?)
[READ a - z]
NEVER

WHEN

YES,
TAKEN
MONTH

(a) Medicine for your heart or
heartbeat

YEAR

MONTH

2

TO

1

2

TO

(c) Medicine for your blood pressure... 1

2

TO

(b) Medicine for cholesterol
or fats in your blood

(d) Diuretic or water pills

1

TO

(e) Aspirin, Tylenol or a similar
non-prescription pain reliever

1

TO

(f) Medication prescribed for
migraine headaches

1

TO

(g) Any other pain reliever needing
a prescription

1

TO

(h) Sleeping pills

1

TO

(i) Diet pills

1

TO

( ) Pills to relax you which required a
j
a prescription (valium, librium)... 1
(SPECIFY:)

TO

(k) Medication for depression
(SPECIFY:)

TO

1

(1) Hormone pills for menopause or aging
symptoms (premarin, DES, estrace,
estrogen, etc. )
1
(SPECIFY:)
(m) Hormone treatments for any other
problems
(SPECIFY PROBLEM AND TREATMENT:)

1

TO

TO

YEAR

�NEVER

YES,
TAKEN

WHEN
MONTH

(n) Any antimalarial medication

1

(o) Medicine for menstrual problems.... 1
(p) Insulin

1

(q) Calcium/Turns

1

(r) Vitamins, iron supplements or other
minerals
1
(s) Thyroid pills

1

(t) Medicine for an upset stomach

1

(u) Herbs or teas for medicinal
purposes

1

(v) Medicine for allergies (including
injections)

1

(w) Prescription medication for
arthritis or rheumatism

1

(x) Prescription medication for other
muscle/joint problems

1

(y) Laxatives

1

(z) Antibiotics

1

(aa.) Any others? (SPECIFY):

1

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

�3. Have you ever had any surgery as an in-patient or on an outpatient basis
since 1960?
1. NO

2. YES

9. DK

FOR EACH SURGERY, ASK:
3.1

GO TO
CHECKLIST
AT END OF
THIS
SECTION
QUESTION # 4

SURGERY
#

[CODE RED]

(a) When did you have the surgery?
(b) What was the diagnosis (or for what reason
were you operated on)?

(c) Please give me the name and address of both
the hospital where you were operated on and
the surgeon who performed the operation.
[RECORD EACH SURGERY, THEN GO TO CHECKLIST]

(a)
DATE

()
1

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

(2)

(3)

(5)

(b)
DIAGNOSIS

�(c)
HOSPITAL NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

SURGEON'S NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

�(SURGERIES CONTINUED)

FOR EACH SURGERY, ASK:

3.1

(a) When did you have the surgery?
(b) What was the diagnosis (or for what reason
were you operated on)?
(c) Please give me the name and address of both
the hospital where you were operated on and
the surgeon who performed the operation.
[RECORD EACH SURGERY, THEN GO TO CHECKLIST]

(a)
SURGERY
#

DATE

(6)
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

()
7

()
8

(9)

(10)

(b)
DIAGNOSIS

�(c)
HOSPITAL NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

SURGEON'S NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

�(SURGERIES CONTINUED)

FOR EACH SURGERY, ASK:
3.1

(a) When did you have the surgery?
(b) What was the diagnosis (or for what reason
were you operated on)?
(c) Please give me the name and address of both
the hospital where you were operated on and
the surgeon who performed the operation.
[RECORD EACH SURGERY, THEN GO TO CHECKLIST]

(a)
SURGERY
#

DATE

(11)
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

(12)

(13)

(4
1)

(15)

(b)
DIAGNOSIS

�(c)
HOSPITAL NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

SURGEON'S NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

�SURGERY CHECKLIST

INTERVIEWER:

AFTER RESPONDENT LISTS ALL HER SURGERIES PROBE ONLY FOR
THOSE NOT MENTIONED ABOVE IN SURGERY SECTION.

4. Have you ever had any of the following operations or procedures?
[READ a - i]
m

YES

NOT SURE

(a) Removal of the uterus

1

2

9

(b) Removal of left ovary only

1

2

9

(c) Removal of right ovary only

1

2

9

(d) Removal of both ovaries

1

2

9

(e) Tubal ligation (having your
tubes tied)

1

2

9

(f) Dilation and curettage (a D&amp;C,
scraping of the uterus)

1

2

9

(g) Breast surgery for cysts
or benign tumors

1

2

9

( h ) Breast surgery f o r cancer
(i) Any pelvic surgery

1
1

(IF YES, SPECIFY REASON:

FOR EACH YES THAT HAS NOT BEEN RECORDED
IN SURGERY SECTION, GO BACK AND
COMPLETE QUESTIONS 3.1 a - c

2
2

9
9

�5. Have you ever been treated for any type of cancer or leukemia with either
radiation or chemotherapy?
1.

NO

9.

DK

2. YES

[CODE RED]

V
[FOR EACH SET OF TREATMENTS, ASK:]

5.1
SKIP TO
QUESTION
#6

(a) When were you treated?
(b) What was the diagnosis (or type of
cancer)?
(c) Please give me the name and address of the
hospital and the doctor who treated you.
(b)
DIAGNOSIS

(a)
DATE

CANCER
#

TO

(1)

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

(2)

TO

(3)

TO

()
4

TO

(5)

�(c)
HOSPITAL NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

DOCTOR'S NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

�6. Have you ever been hospitalized on an in-patient or an out-patient basis
for any reason (besides what we've just discussed)? Please include any
hospitalization for emotional or psychiatric problems as well.
1.

NO

9.

2.

YES

DK

[CODE RED]

[FOR EACH HOSPITALIZATION, ASK:]
6.1

SKIP TO
QUESTION
# 7

(a) When were you hospitalized?
(b) What was the diagnosis (or for what reason
were you hospitalized)?
(c)

Please give me the name and address of the
hospital and the doctor who treated you.

(a)
DATE

HOSPITAL
#

(b)
DIAGNOSIS

TO

(1)
MONTH

MONTH

MONTH

MONTH

YEAR

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

MONTH

YEAR

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

(2)

TO

(3)

TO

TO

(5)

�(c)
HOSPITAL NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

DOCTOR'S NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

�(HOSPITALIZATION CONTINUED)

[FOR EACH HOSPITALIZATION, ASK:]
6.1

(a) When were you hospitalized?
(b) What was the diagnosis (or for what reason
were you hospitalized)?
(c)

(b)
DIAGNOSIS

(a)
DATE

HOSPITAL
#

TO

(6)
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

(7)
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

(8)

(9)

Please give me the name and address of the
hospital and the doctor who treated you.

TO

L

MONTH

TO
YEAR

MONTH . YEAR

TO

(10)
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

�(c)
HOSPITAL NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

DOCTOR'S NAME
ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP

�7. Have you ever seen a counselor or mental health professional for any
reason?
1. NO
I

2.

9.

7.1
SKIP TO
QUESTION
# 8

YES
i
[FOR EACH, ASK:]

(a) When was that?
(b) What was the reason you went?

[PROBE: Any other times?]
(a)
DATE

(b)
REASON

TO

(
D
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

(2)

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

TO

(3)

TO

TO

(5)

�8. Have you ever been part of a support group or therapy group led by a
licensed therapist or a certified counselor, such as a licensed social
worker, a psychologist or a psychiatrist?
1. NO
9. DK

2. YES

*
[FOR EACH GROUP, ASK:]
8.1

(a) When was that?
(b) What was the reason you went?

SKIP TO
NEXT
SECTION

[PROBE:

Any other groups?]

(b)
REASON

(a)
DATE

TO

(1)
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

(2)

TO

(3)

TO

()
4

TO

()
5

�SOCIAL SUPPORT NETWORK

The next questions concern contact with other people.
1. Are there any groups or organizations that you attend regularly, such as
church groups, political groups, unions, clubs, veterans groups, exercise
or sports groups, neighborhood or school associations, etc.?

1. N(o
9.

2.

YES

DK

SKIP TO Q # 2

1.1

What is the first group that comes to mind?

1.2

How frequently do you attend it?
(RECORD RESPONSES TO BOTH QUESTIONS ON THE FIRST LINE BELOW, THEN
PROBE: Is there another group? How frequently do you attend it?
RECORD RESPONSE ON THE SECOND LINE BELOW. REPEAT PROBE UNTIL ALL
LINES ARE FILLED OR THE RESPONDENT CANNOT THINK OF ANYMORE GROUPS.)

NAME OR TYPE OF GROUP

AT LEAST AT LEAST AT LEAST
ONCE A
ONCE A ONCE EVERY
3 MONTHS
WEEK

AT LEAST
ONCE EVERY

LESS THAN
ONCE EVERY

6 MONTHS

6 MONTHS

1

3

4

5

1

2

3

4

5

1

2

3

4

5

1

2

3

4

5

1

2.

2

2

3

4

5

Now I have some questions about people who may be close to you. Do you
have anyone who you can go to with problems or from whom you can get
advice, help or emotional support? You may include your spouse, partner
or other members of your immediate family, other relatives, friends,
neighbors, or people with whom you work.
1.
9.

NO
DK

SKIP TO NEXT SECTION

2.

YES

�2.1 Who is the first person that comes to mind?
(PROBE 2 TIMES: Is there anyone else?)
PERSON 1

PERSON 2

PERSON 3

IF THREE PEOPLE ARE LISTED, ASK: How many others?
SIZE OF NETWORK (GRAND TOTAL):
# ABOVE +

Now I would like to ask you a few questions about each of the people
you just mentioned.

2.2 Is
(USE NAME/RELATIONSHIP GIVEN BY RESPONDENT)

1. Male
2. Female
2.3 Approximately how old is
(RECORD ANSWER IN YEARS)
2.4 Is

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Never married
Married and living with spouse
Separated
Divorced
Widowed

9.

DON'T KNOW

2.5 Is

currently working?

[IF YES ASK, part time or full time?;

1.

NO

2.
3.
9.

YES,PART TIME &lt; 35 HOURS PER WEEK
YES, FULL TIME &gt;. 35 HOURS PER WEEK
NOT SURE/DON'T KNOW

2.6 Approximately how long have you known
(RECORD ANSWER IN YEARS - ROUND TO NEAREST YEAR)

�2.7

's ethnic background?

What is
01. IRISH

09. NO PARTICULAR ETHNIC BACKGROUND
10. OTHER (SPECIFY:) (1)

02. ENGLISH
03. FRENCH OR FRENCH
CANADIAN
04. GREEK
05. ITALIAN
06. BLACK, AFROAMERICAN
07. JEWISH
08. HISPANIC

2.8

What is

[CIRCLE ALL MENTIONED]

()
2
(3)
77. REFUSED
99. NOT SURE/DK

's relationship to you?
01
02
03
04
05
06

SPOUSE
OTHER IMMEDIATE FAMILY MEMBER LIVING IN HOUSEHOLD
OTHER RELATIVE NOT LIVING IN HOUSEHOLD
FRIEND
NEIGHBOR
CO-WORKER
07. CLERGYMAN/DOCTOR/OTHER/PROFESSIONAL, ETC.
08. OTHER
2.9

live:

Does

1. In your neighborhood (or within 1 mile)
2. In your town/city (within 10 miles of you)
3. Elsewhere in your state, or
4. Out-of-state
2.10 How do you and
01.
02.
03.
04.
05.
06.

usually contact each other?

In person,
By telephone,
By mail,
In person and over the telephone
By telephone and mail, or
All three (PERSON, TELEPHONE, MAIL)

2.11 How often do you and
01.
02.
03.
04.
05.
06.

contact each other in this way?

AT LEAST ONCE A DAY
AT LEAST ONCE A WEEK
AT LEAST ONCE A MONTH
AT LEAST ONCE EVERY THREE MONTHS
AT LEAST ONCE EVERY SIX MONTHS
LESS THAN ONCE EVERY SIX MONTHS

2.12 Who usually makes the contact?
1. Do you make the contact most of the time, does
2.
make the contact most of the time
or does
3. Each of you make the contact equally

SKIP TO
Q #3

�3. Among the
other?
1.

NO

9.

(NUMBER) people you have named, do any of them know each

2.

YES

DK

ASK FOR EACH PAIR

1

Does [PERSON #1] know [PERSON #2]?
Does [PERSON #2] know [PERSON #3]?

RECORD NAMES BELOW

[PERSON #3]?

NO

YES

NOT SURE/DK

a.

1 WITH 2

1

2

9

b.

1 WITH 3

1

2

9

c.

3.2

NUMBERS OF PAIRS

2 WITH 3

1

2

9

Are these people likely to contact each other independently of you, about
something which does not have to do with you?

NO

2.

YES

DK

3.2.1

[ASK ONLY FOR PAIRS WHO KNOW EACH OTHER]

Would [INSERT PAIRS] contact each other independently
of you about something which does not have to do with
you?

RECORD NAMES BELOW

NUMBERS OF PAIRS

fip_

YES

a . 1 WITH 2

1

9

9

2

9

2

9

b.

1 WITH 3

1

c.

2 WITH 3

1

NOT SURE/DK

�LIFESTYLE SECTION

This next section asks several questions about lifestyle habits,
LIFESTYLE: ALCOHOL
1. On the average, do you drink alcoholic beverages:
1. Daily;
2. At least once a week;
3.

SKIP TO
CM 2

At least once a month;

4. Less than once a month; or
5.

1.1

Not at all
9. DK
4,
4Have you ever drunk any alcoholic beverages?
1.

1.2

NO

2.

YES

Are there any particular reasons why you don't drink (now)?
[RECORD VERBATIM] [CIRCLE ALL THAT APPLY]

a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
j.
k.

I'VE NEVER DRUNK IN MY LIFE.
RELIGIOUS/MORAL REASONS/DON'T BELIEVE IN IT/BROUGHT UP NOT TO
DRINK.
FOR DIET/MEDICAL/HEALTH REASONS.
(FAMILY) PROBLEMS CAUSED BY OTHERS WHO DRINK.
PERSONAL/FAMILY/JOB/SCHOOL PROBLEMS CAUSED BY OWN DRINKING.
I'M AN ALCOHOLIC; I HAVE A DRINKING PROBLEM/I NEEDED TO STOP
DRINKING/I WAS SPENDING TOO MUCH TIME DRINKING/I JOINED AA.
SOCIAL/PEER FAMILY PRESSURE TO STOP DRINKING/OTHER SOCIAL
CIRCUMSTANCES/OTHERS DON'T DRINK.
PERSONAL PREFERENCE/I DON'T LIKE THE TASTE/DIDN'T DRINK MUCH &amp;
DECIDED TO QUIT.
TOO EXPENSIVE TO DRINK/TOO MUCH MONEY,
PREGNANT.
OTHER:

SKIP TO INTERVIEWER CHECK AT TOP OF QUESTION # 5

�2. How often do you usually drink beer?
0. Never
I
9. DK

1. Less than once a month,
2. Less than once a week,

i

3. I or 2 days a week,
4. 3 or 4 days a week, or

SKIP TO
QUESTION # 3

5. 5 or more days a week.

2.1 Thinking of all the times you have had beer recently,
when you drink beer, how many do you usually drink each
time?

2.2 When you drink beer, what is the most you drink?
BEERS
2.3 About how often do you drink this much beer?
1.

Less than once a month,

2.

Less than once a week,

3.

1 or 2 days a week,

4. 3 or 4 days a week, or
5.

5 or more days a week.

�3. How often do you usually drink wine, or a punch containing wine?
0. Never
I
9. DK

1. Less than once a month,
2. Less than once a week,
3. 1 or 2 days a week,

y

4. 3 or 4 days a week, or
SKIP TO
QUESTION # 4

5. 5 or more days a week.
3.1 Thinking of all the times you have had wine recently,
when you drink wine, how many glasses do you usually
drink each time?
GLASSES

3.2 When you drink wine, what is the most you drink?
GLASSES
3.3 About how often do you drink this much wine?
1.

Less than once a month,

2.

Less than once a week,

3.

1 or 2 days a week,

4.

3 or 4 days a week, or

5.

5 or more days a week.

�4. How often do you usually have drinks containing liquor (such as martinis,
manhattans, highballs, or straight drinks)?
0. Never

1. Less than once a month,

9. DK

2. Less than once a week,

J

3. 1 or 2 days a week,
4. 3 or 4 days a week, or

SKIP TO
QUESTION # 5

5. 5 or more days a week.
4.1 Thinking of all the times you have had liquor recently,
when you have drinks containing liquor, how much do you
usually drink each time?

4.2 When you have drinks containing liquor, what is the

DRINKS
4.3 About how often do you drink this much liquor?
1. Less than once a month,
2.

Less than once a week,

3.

1 or 2 days a week,

4. 3 or 4 days a week,
5.

5 or more days a week.

�[INTERVIEWER CHECK: IF RESPONDENT NEVER DRANK. SKIP TO LIFESTYLE: TOBACCO]

5.

I'm now going to ask you some questions about personal experiences you may
have had when drinking.
DK
NO YES
a.

Did drinking ever cause you to have an accident
or injury of any kind?

1

2

9

b. Have you ever been arrested for drunk driving?

1

2

9

c. Have you ever been arrested because of anything
connected with your drinking alcohol (aside from
drunk driving arrests?

1

2

9

Have you ever lost or quit a job because of your
drinking alcohol?

1

2

9

Have your ever lost a close friendship because
of your drinking alcohol?

1

2

9

Has your drinking alcohol ever been a cause
of trouble in your household?

1

2

9

Have you ever been separated or divorced because
of your drinking alcohol?

1

2

9

1

2

9

d.
e.
f.
g.

h. Have you ever gotten into arguments or fights
while drinking alcohol?

6. Have your drinking patterns changed at all from the time you were 18 up until
now?
1. NO

2.

YES

I
9.

DK

6.1 Did you drink more or less when you were 18 than you do
now?
1.

MORE

2.

LESS

9.

DK

6.2 What were your drinking patterns when you were 18 and
how have they changed since that time?

6.3 When (during what years) did the changes occur and why
did they occur?

�]
LIFESTYLE:

TOBACCO AND OTHER

. Do you:
A.

smoke cigarettes?

1. NO

2. YES

B.

smoke cigarillos?

1. NO

2. YES

C.

smoke a pipe?

1. NO

2. YES

D.

smoke cigars?

1. NO

2. YES

E.

chew tobacco?

1. NO

2. YES

F NO TO ALL
F A THRU E

IF YES TO ONLY
ONE OF A THRU E

IF YES TO MORE THAN
ONE OF A THRU E

I

1.1

SKIP TO
QUESTION
# 2

Which do you do most often?
[CIRCLE ONE]
1. Smoke cigarettes?
2. Smoke cigarillos?
3. Smoke a pipe?
4. Smoke cigars, or
5. Chew tobacco?

1.2

(REFER TO MOST FREQUENT ABOVE)
When you smoke/chew
, about how many do you
smoke/chew in a day (cigarettes, pipefuls, plugs)

UNITS
1.3

In what year did you first smoke/chew?

DK - 99

1.4

Have you tried to quit in the past 12 months?

1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

DK

�1 . 5 Have your smoking/chewing patterns changed at all from
the time you began up until now?
1. NO
I
9. DK

2. YES

1.5.1 Did you smoke/chew more or less when
you began than you do now?
1.

MORE

2.

LESS

9.

DK

1.5.2 What were your smoking/chewing
patterns when you began and how have
they changed since that time?

1.5.3 When (during what years) did the
changes occur and why did they occur?

-SKIP TO QUESTION # 3-

�2. Have you ever smoked cigarettes, cigarillos, a pipe, cigars, or chewed
tobacco?
1. NO
9.

DK

SKIP TO
QUESTION # 4

2.

YES
I
2.1 Which did you do most often?

1.

Smoke cigarettes?

2.
3.

Smoke cigarillos?
Smoke a pipe?

4.
5.

[CIRCLE ONE]

Smoke cigars, or
Chew tobacco?

[REFER TO MOST FREQUENT ABOVE]
., about how many did you
2.2 When you smoked/chewed
smoke/chew in a day? (cigarettes, pipefuls, plugs)?
UNITS
2.3 In what year did you first smoke/chew?
99. DK

2.4a. How long ago did you quit smoking/chewing tobacco?
(b) What year was that?
MONTHS or

(b) 19

YEARS AGO

�3. Over your entire lifetime, for how long have you smoked/chewed altogether?
MONTHS

OR

YEARS

99 . DK

4. Does anyone else live with you who smokes cigarettes at home everyday?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

DK

5. Do you work, on a daily basis with coworker(s) who smoke cigarettes around
you everyday?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9. DK

6. Have you ever used any of the following substances?

[READ a - h]

(IF YES to a - h, READ QUESTIONS 6.1 - 6.3 FOR THAT ITEM)
6.1

In what year did you first try it or start using it?

6.2

Do you ever use it now?

6 .3

Did you ever have a problem with vour use of
IF YES, ASK: Whe n (during what years)?
YEAR
TRIED
NO

YES

DK

NOW
USE

?
PROBLEM
USE

YEARS

NO

YES

DK

NO

YES

DK

( a ) Marijuana

1

2

9 1 9

1

2

9

1

2

9

( b ) Hashish

1

2

9 1 9

1

2

9

1

2

9

( c ) Barbiturates
(Downers)

1

2

9 1 9

1

2

9

1

2

9

( d ) Amphetamines
(Uppers)

1

2

9 1 9

1

2

9

1

2

9

( e ) Hallucinogens 1
such as LSD
or mescaline

2

9 1 9

1

2

9

1

2

9

( f ) Cocaine

1

2

9 1 9

1

2

9

1

2

9

( g ) Heroin

1

2

9 1 9

1

2

9

1

2

9

( h ) Opiates

1

2

9 1 9

1

2

9

1

2

9

�7. Have you ever had a gambling problem?
1. NO
9.

2.

YES

I

7.1 During what years did you have that problem?

DK

TO

19

8. Have you ever contemplated suicide?
1. NO

2.

YES

I
9.

DK

SKIP TO
NEXT
SECTION

8.1 Have you ever attempted suicide?
2. YES
i
8.2 How many times?

1. NO
I
9. DK
SKIP TO
NEXT
SECTION

ENTER #

8.3 Could you please tell me: (a) In what
year(s) you made the attempt(s)?
(b) And, what was going on in your
life at that time?
(a)

#1

# 2.

#3

19

(b)

�QUALITY OF LIFE SECTION

1. I am going to read ycm a list of ways you might have felt or behaved.
Please tell me on hovj many different days you have felt this way during the
past week:
ON AT MOST
()N UP TO ON 3-4 ON 5-7
During the past week:
1 DAY
2 DAYS
DAYS
DAYS
I was bothered by thi.ngs
that usually don't be&gt;ther me . . . . 1

2

3

4

I did not feel like €.at ing;
my appetite was poor

1

2

3

4

I felt that I could rlot shake
off the blues even w: .th help
from my family or fri ends

1

2

3

4

I felt I was just as good
as other people

1

2

3

4

I had trouble keepingr, my
mind on what I was dc inE

1

2

3

4

I felt depressed

1

2

3

4

I felt that everything I did
was an effort

1

2

3

4

I felt hopeful about the
future

1

2

3

4

I thought my life had been
a failure

1

2

3

4

I felt fearful

1

2

3

4

My sleep was restless

1

2

3

4

I was happy

1

2

3

4

I talked less than usual

1

2

3

4

I felt lonely

1

2

3

4

People were unfriendl

1

2

3

4

I enjoyed life

1

2

3

4

I had crying spells . .

1

2

3

4

I felt sad

1

2

3

4

I felt that people dislike m e . . . 1

2

3

4

I could not cet "eoine"

2

3

4

1

�2. In general, how pleased are you with the way your life has gone so far?
1. Very Pleased,
2. Pleased,
3. You wish some things were different but are generally happy,
4. Unhappy, or
5. Very Unhappy
9. DK

3. Now looking towards the future, how do you feel about the rest of your
life?
1. Very Optimistic,
2. Somewhat Optimistic,
3. Unsure,
4. Somewhat Pessimistic, or
5. Very Pessimistic
8. DO NOT THINK ABOUT IT
9. DK

�MILITARY HISTORY

Let's go next to your military history.
1. Have you ever served either on active duty, or in the reserves in any branch of
the United States armed forces?
2.

YES

i

1.1 Did you serve in the (READ a-d)? FOR EACH YES ASK: During
which years?
YES
YEAR(S)

ra

a. National Guard or Reserves

1

2

b. Army

1

2

c. Navy

1

2

d. Air Force

1

2

e. Marines

1

2

1.2 Were you ever in ROTC?
2. YES

1. NO

9. DK

1.2.1 When was that?

(PROBE FOR YEARS)

1.2.2 What college were you in when you joined
ROTC and what city and state was it in?
NAME OF COLLEGE

CITY

2.

STATE

Now, could you please tell me whether you are currently on active duty, in the
reserves, retired or whether you have been permanently discharged?
1.

ACTIVE DUTY

3.

RETIRED

2.

RESERVES

A.

PERMANENTLY DISCHARGED

2.1.

In what year did you retire (were you discharged)?
[IF&gt;1 BRANCH, ASK FOR EACH BRANCH]
^

19

(YEAR)

BRANCH

19

(YEAR)

BRANCH

v

�3.

In what year did you first enter the armed forces?

19
YEAR

4.

What was the highest grade of school that you had completed when you first
entered the military?
1.

1-11

2.

12 (HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA OR GED)

3.

13-15 (SOME COLLEGE, TECHNICAL SCHOOL, ASSOCIATE'S DEGREE)

4.

16 (BACHELOR'S DEGREE)

5.

17+ (GRADUATE/PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL)

9.

DK

5. What is the highest grade of school that you have completed up until now?
1. 1-11

2.

12 (HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA OR GED)

3.

13-15 (SOME COLLEGE, TECHNICAL SCHOOL, ASSOCIATE'S DEGREE

4.

16 (BACHELOR'S DEGREE)

5.

17+ (GRADUATE/PROFESSIONAL

9.

DK

SCHOOL)

6. Why did you decide to enter the armed forces?
Any others?)

(PROBE: Any other reasons?

�FIRST BRANCH JOINED

Why did you choose that particular branch of the service?
(PROBE: ANY OTHER REASONS? ANY OTHERS?)

[NOTE: ASK ONLY IF NOT CURRENTLY IN BRANCH 1]:
Why did you leave that particular branch of the service: (PROBE: ANY OTHER
REASONS? ANY OTHERS?)

INTERVIEWER CHECK: IF RESPONDENT ONLY SERVED IN ONE BRANCH, SKIP TO NEXT
SECTION. IF &gt; 1 BRANCH CONTINUE.

SECOND BRANCH JOINED

Why did you choose that particular branch of the service?
(PROBE: ANY OTHER REASONS? ANY OTHERS?)

[NOTE: ASK ONLY IF NOT CURRENTLY IN BRANCH 2]:
Why did you leave that particular branch of the service: (PROBE: ANY OTHER
REASONS? ANY OTHERS?)

�THIRD BRANCH JOINED

Why did you choose that particular branch of the service?
(PROBE: ANY OTHER REASONS? ANY OTHERS?)

[NOTE:

ASK ONLY IF NOT CURRENTLY IN BRANCH 3]:

Why did you leave that particular branch of the service: (PROBE: ANY OTHER
REASONS? ANY OTHERS?)

FOURTH BRANCH JOINED

Why did you choose that particular branch of the service?
(PROBE: ANY OTHER REASONS? ANY OTHERS?)

[NOTE: ASK ONLY IF NOT CURRENTLY IN BRANCH 4]:
Why did you leave that particular branch of the service: (PROBE: ANY OTHER
REASONS? ANY OTHERS?)

�This next question deals with your tours of duty, beginning with your entry in the armed
services. Please tell me where you served and for how long. Please include basic trainif^
and both temporary and permanent tours of duty. When you first joined the (BRANCH):
(REPEAT UNTIL COMPLETE MILITARY HISTORY FOR ALL BRANCHES SERVED IN.)
_
* NOTE:

m

AT END OF THE SECTION, FOR NURSES WHO SERVED IN VIETNAM SELECT THE LONGEST VIETNAM
TOUR OF DUTY. IF
1 VIETNAM TOUR OF EQUAL LENGTH, SELECT THE FIRST/SECOND TOUR
FOR ALL OTHER NURSES, SELECT THE LONGEST TOUR OF DUTY BETWEEN 1965 - 1972
T
EXCLUDING ANY TOURS OF DUTY WHILE A STUDENT AND GO TO NURSING SECTION.
™

7. (a) Where were you stationed? (COUNTRY, CITY, STATE, AND AREA) And, what unit were yen __
attached to?
4p
7.(b) For how long?

(From when to when?)
-• -2

7.(c) What was your rank during that time?

•
I

7.(d) What was your assignment and your primary military occupational specialty?

_

7.(e) FOR NURSES, ASK: What hospital were you assigned to? What type of ward did you work
on?
7.(*f) FOR SELECTED TOUR, ASK: May I please have the name and address of another woman
who served with you on that tour of duty?
(b)

(c)

TIME

(a)
WHERE

BRANCH

RANK

•

•
TO

(1)
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

(UNIT)

TO

(2)

(UNIT)

(*f)
NAME

STREET ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

ZIP

�(d)
ASSIGNMENT/MOS

(e)
(NURSES) HOSPITAL, WARD

�TOURS OF DUTY CONTINUED

* NOTE:

AT END OF THE SECTION, FOR NURSES WHO SERVED IN VIETNAM SELECT THE LONGEST VIETNAM
TOUR OF DUTY. IF
1 VIETNAM TOUR OF EQUAL LENGTH, SELECT THE FIRST/SECOND TOUR^,
FOR ALL OTHER NURSES, SELECT THE LONGEST TOUR OF DUTY BETWEEN 1965 - 1972
^
EXCLUDING ANY TOURS OF DUTY WHILE A STUDENT AND GO TO NURSING SECTION.

7.(a) Where were you stationed? (COUNTRY, CITY, STATE, AND AREA) And, what unit were yen _J
attached to?
**
7.(b) For how long?

(From when to when?)

_,
«

7.(c) What was your rank during that time?
7.(d) What was your assignment and your primary military occupational specialty?
^&gt;.
^

7.(e) FOR NURSES, ASK: What hospital were you assigned to? What type of ward did you work
on?
7.(*f) FOR SELECTED TOUR, ASK: May I please have the name and address of another woman
who served with you on that tour of duty?

(b)

(a)
WHERE

BRANCH

(c)
RANK

TIME

TO

(3)
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

(UNIT)

TO

(4)

(UNIT) .

(*f&gt;

NAME

STREET ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

ZIP

�(d)
ASSIGNMENT/MOS

(e)
(NURSES) HOSPITAL, WARD

�TOURS OF DUTY CONTINUED
* NOTE: AT END OF THE
TOUR OF DUTY.
FOR ALL OTHER
EXCLUDING ANY

SECTION, FOR NURSES WHO SERVED IN VIETNAM SELECT THE LONGEST VIETNAM
IF 1 VIETNAM TOUR OF EQUAL LENGTH, SELECT THE FIRST/SECOND TOUR. ,
NURSES, SELECT THE LONGEST TOUR OF DUTY BETWEEN 1965 - 1972
jjf
TOURS OF DUTY WHILE A STUDENT AND GO TO NURSING SECTION.

7.(a) Where were you stationed? (COUNTRY, CITY, STATE, AND AREA) And, what unit were you~
attached to?
**
7.(b) For how long?

(From when to when?)
•
I

7.(c) What was your rank during that time?
7.(d) What was your assignment and your primary military occupational specialty?
7.(e) FOR NURSES, ASK: What hospital were you assigned to? What type of ward did you work
on?

m

7.(*f) FOR SELECTED TOUR, ASK: May I please have the name and address of another woman
who served with you on that tour of duty?
(a)
WHERE

BRANCH

(b)
TIME

(c)
RANK

TO

(5)

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

(UNIT)

TO

(6)

(UNIT)

(*f)
NAME

STREET ADDRESS
CITY

STATE

ZIP

�(d)
ASSIGNMENT/MOS

(e)
(NURSES) HOSPITAL, WARD

�TOURS OF DUTY CONTINUED

* NOTE:

AT END OF THE SECTION, FOR NURSES WHO SERVED IN VIETNAM SELECT THE LONGEST VIETNAM
TOUR OF DUTY. IF
1 VIETNAM TOUR OF EQUAL LENGTH, SELECT THE FIRST/SECOND TOUR .
FOR ALL OTHER NURSES, SELECT THE LONGEST TOUR OF DUTY BETWEEN 1965 - 1972
^
EXCLUDING ANY TOURS OF DUTY WHILE A STUDENT AND GO TO NURSING SECTION.

7.(a) Where were you stationed? (COUNTRY, CITY, STATE, AND AREA)
attached to?

7.(b) For how long?

And, what unit were yo\
*

(From when to when?)

m
7.(c) What was your rank during that time?
7.(d) What was your assignment and your primary military occupational specialty?

-

7.(e) FOR NURSES, ASK: What hospital were you assigned to? What type of ward did you work
on?

m

7.(*f) FOR SELECTED TOUR, ASK: May I please have the name and address of another woman
who served with you on that tour of duty?
(a)
BRANCH

(c)
RANK

(b)
TIME

WHERE

TO

(7)
MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

(UNIT)

TO

(8)

(UNIT)

(*f)
NAME

STREET ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

ZIP

�(d)
ASSIGNMENT/MOS

(e)
(NURSES) HOSPITAL, WARD

�TOURS OF DUTY CONTINUED
* NOTE: AT END OF THE
TOUR OF DUTY.
FOR ALL OTHER
EXCLUDING ANY

SECTION, FOR NURSES WHO SERVED IN VIETNAM SELECT THE LONGEST VIETNJfi
IF
1 VIETNAM TOUR OF EQUAL LENGTH, SELECT THE FIRST/SECOND TOUR.
NURSES, SELECT THE LONGEST TOUR OF DUTY BETWEEN 1965 - 1972
=
TOURS OF DUTY WHILE A STUDENT AND GO TO NURSING SECTION.
M

7.(a) Where were you stationed? (COUNTRY, CITY, STATE, AND AREA)
attached to?
7.(b) For how long?

And, what unit were yo
w'

(From when to when?)

__

7.(c) What was your rank during that time?

**

7.(d) What was your assignment and your primary military occupational specialty?

*
7.(e) FOR NURSES, ASK: What hospital were you assigned to? What type of ward did you work
on?
7.(*f) FOR SELECTED TOUR, ASK:

May I please have the name and address of another womanm
who served with you on that tour of duty?
(b)

(c)

TIME

(a)
WHERE

BRANCH

•

TO

(9)

MONTH

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

YEAR

(UNIT)

TO

(0.
1)

(UNIT)

&lt;*f)

NAME

STREET ADDRESS
CITY

m

RANK

STATE

ZIP

�(d)
ASSIGNMENT/MOS

(e)
(NURSES) HOSPITAL, WARD

�TOURS OF DUTY CONTINUED

* NOTE:

AT END OF THE SECTION, FOR NURSES WHO SERVED IN VIETNAM SELECT THE LONGEST VIETNAM
TOUR OF DUTY. IF
1 VIETNAM TOUR OF EQUAL LENGTH, SELECT THE FIRST/SECOND TOUR__
FOR ALL OTHER NURSES, SELECT THE LONGEST TOUR OF DUTY BETWEEN 1965 - 1972
^
EXCLUDING ANY TOURS OF DUTY WHILE A STUDENT AND GO TO NURSING SECTION.
*

7. (a) Where were you stationed? (COUNTRY, CITY, STATE, AND AREA) And, what unit were ycn^
attached to?
**
7.(b) For how long?

(From when to when?)

__

7.(c) What was your rank during that time?
7.(d) What was your assignment and your primary military occupational specialty?
7.(e) FOR NURSES, ASK: What hospital were you assigned to? What type of ward did you work
on?

m

7.(*f) FOR SELECTED TOUR, ASK: May I please have the name and address of another woman
who served with you on that tour of duty?
(a)
BRANCH

(c)
RANK

(b)
TIME

WHERE

TO

(11).

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

(UNIT)

TO

(12)

(UNIT)

(*f)

NAME

STREET ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

ZIP

�(d)
ASSIGNMENT/MOS

(e)
(NURSES) HOSPITAL, WARD

�The following questions deal with any problems or difficulties you may have
experienced while in the Military or may be currently experiencing.

*

8a. While in the Military, did you:

l
8b. Do you currently:
[IF NO LONGER IN THE MILITARY, ASK:)

8c.

Between then and now did you:

(8a)
NO YES DK
(a.)

Have trouble dealing with bad
memories about your experiences
i n t h e Military?

(b.) Have trouble sleeping due to
nightmares o r b a d dreams?
(c.) Have trouble getting along with
others?
(d.)
(e.)
(f.)

(8b)
NO YES DK

1 2 9

i
1 2 9

1 2 9

129

'_
(8c) '
NO YES DK

129

129

1 2 9

1 2 9

1 2 9 1

Have any trouble with:
(8a. superiors) (8b. t h e law)?

129

129

1

Have trouble getting emotionally
close t o others?

1 2 9

1 - 2 9

1 2 9 ,

Have trouble controlling your
temper?

1 2 9

1 2 9

1 2 9

2

9

§

•

(g.)

Have trouble tolerating
frustration?

1 2 9

1 2 9

(h.)

Have sexual problems?

1 2 9

1 2 9

(i.)

Have trouble expressing your
feelings t o those y o u care about?

129

1 2
1 2 9

129

129

(j.)

Ever feel depressed a lot?

129

129

129

(k.)

Ever feel nervous a lot?

129

129

129

(1.)

Have trouble feeling and
expressing emotions (numbness)?

1 2 9

1 2 9

1 2 9

Have trouble trusting
other people?

1 2 9

1 2 9

1 2 9

Have trouble dealing with
stressful experiences?

1 2 9

1 2 9

1 2 9

129

129

(m.)
(n.)

(o.) Have trouble concentrating?
(p.) Ever feel your actions in
t h e military were n o t worthwhile?

129

129

12
12

�COMBAT EXPOSURE

9. For each of the following questions, please tell me whether or not it
applies to your military experience. [READ a - i]
NO

a. Did you serve in area designated as
a war zone?

1

b. Did you fly in an aircraft over a
combat zone?

YES

DK

2

9

1

c. Were you stationed in a combat
zone?
d. Did you receive incoming fire from
enemy artillery, rockets, or
mortars?

1

2

e. Did you receive bombing attacks?

1

2

f. Did you receive sniper or sapper
fire?
g. Did you receive full-scale enemy
attack?

1

h. Did you receive war-related wounds?

1

i. Did you see Americans being killed
or being wounded?
•.

1

2

j . Were you a prisoner of war?

1

2

�NURSING SECTION

These questions refer to your general nursing experience prior to entry into
the military.

1. At what type of school did you receive your basic nursing education?
1.

Community or Junior College

2. Hospital based school of nursing
3.

College Program

4. OTHER
9.

(SPECIFY):

DK

2. At graduation did you feel professionally competent to be a registered
nurse?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

3. At graduation did you feel emotionally competent to be a registered
nurse?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

4. What was your highest nursing degree when you entered the military?
01.

SJUDENT

[ SKIP TO Q # 18 [

02.

A.D.

03. R.N.

04. B.S.N.
05.

M.S.N.

06. OTHER (SPECIFY:)

99.

NOT SURE/DK

�5. Before you entered the military, how much nursing experience did you
have?
1. &lt; 6 months
2. &gt; 6 months, but 5l 1 year
3. &gt; 1 "£- 3 years
4. &gt; 3 ^ 5 years
5. &gt; 5 years
9.

DK

6. Before you entered the military, had you been a charge nurse?
1. NO

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

7. Before you entered the military, had you worked evenings (3 - 11 PM)?
1. NO
8

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

. :fore you entered the military, had you worked nights (11 PM / AM)?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

9. Before you entered the military, had you worked in a:

[READ a - b]

[IF YES, ASK: During which years?]
NO

a. Tax supported hospital (City hospital)?
b. Private hospital
c. OTHER (SPECIFY):

1

YES

2

YEARS

�I'd like to ask you some questions regarding your work experience at the
facility you worked in just prior to your entry in the military.
10. What type of facility was this? Was it a:
(READ a - e)

CIRCLE ONE ONLY.

(a) General hospital,
(b) Psychiatric hospital,
(c) Outpatient facility, or
(d) Doctor's office
(e) OTHER (SPECIFY):
11. Was there adequate nursing staff at this facility?
1. NO
12.

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

In general, how were you treated by the civilian physicians at this
facility? Were you treated:
1. As a colleague
2. As a servant, or
3. As a sexual object
4. OTHER (SPECIFY):

9.

DK

13. Were equipment and/or supplies at this facility adequate?
1. NO

2. YES

3. NOT SURE/DK

�14. Before you entered the military, in what area did you work the most?
01.

MEDICAL NURSING

02. SURGICAL NURSING
03.

OBSTETRICAL NURSING

04.

PEDIATRIC NURSING

05.

OPERATING ROOM

06.

EMERGENCY ROOM

07.

PSYCHIATRIC NURSING

08.

PRE-ANESTHESIA HOLDING AREA (PRE-OP)

09.

RECOVERY ROOM (POST-OP)

10. OTHER (SPECIFY):
99. DK

15. Before you entered the military, how much experience did you have with
critically ill patients? Would you say you had:
1. A great deal of experience
2. A moderate amount
3. A limited amount, or
4. None
9.

DK

16. Before you entered the military, did you regard nursing as a personally
fulfilling profession?
1. NO

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

17. Before entering the military, was nursing emotionally satisfying?
1. NO

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

�*SELECT LONGEST VIETNAM/OTHER TOUR OF DUTY '65-'72 PER INSTRUCTIONS AND
EXCLUDING ANY TOUR OF DUTY WHILE A STUDENT*
I'd like to focus on just one of your tours of duty, namely the time when
you were stationed in
; from
to
. Now,
I'd like to ask you a set of questions about that particular assignment.
18. What was your nursing position during this assignment?
[READ 01 - 06 AND CIRCLE ONE ONLY]
OjL.

Operating room nurse

02.

Staff nurse,

03.

Charge nurse,

04.

Flight nurse,

05.

Intensive care nurse, or a

06. Triage/Emergency room nurse
07.

OTHER (SPECIFY):

[GO TO QUESTION # 19]
\'
18.1

Which of the following anesthetics were used in the O.R.: was;
[READ a - d]
NO
YES
DK
a

. Fluothane,

1

2

9

b

. Halothane,

1

2

9

c . Ketamine, o r

1

2

d . Nitrous Oxide a n d Oxygen

1

18.2 Were instruments sterilized, using:

. Gas,

YES
1

b. Ethylene Oxide, or
c
18.3

1

. Steam

NO

2. YES

1

9.

NOT SURE/DK

9

DK

2

2

Were supplies of sterile equipment adequate?
1.

2

[READ a - c]

NO
a

9

9

9
2

9

�ASK FOR ALL NURSES

19. During this assignment was the nursing staff adequate?
1. NO

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

20. During this assignment were there adequate supplies?
1. NO

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

21. At the beginning of your assignment did you feel professionally
competent to carry out your military assignment?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

22. At the end of your assignment did you feel professionally competent
to carry out your military assignment?
1. NO

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

23. At the beginning of your assignment did you feel emotionally
competent to carry out your military assignment?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

24. At the end of your assignment did you feel emotionally competent to
carry out your military assignment?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

25. In general, how were you treated by military physicians?
1. As a colleague
2. As a servant, or
3. As a sexual object
4.

OTHER (SPECIFY):

9.

NOT SURE/DK

26. Were you prepared emotionally for the types of injuries you would
see as a military nurse?
1.

NOT PREPARED

9.

NOT SURE/DK

2.

YES, PREPARED

3.

DIDN'T SEE INJURIES

�27. Were you prepared professionally for the types of injuries you saw
in the military?
1.

NOT PREPARED

9.

2.

YES, PREPARED

3.

DIDN'T SEE INJURIES

NOT SURE/DK

28. While in the military did you feel the workload was more than you
could handle?
1.

29.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

Were the hospital units where you worked noisy?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

30. Were you concerned about physical injury to yourself while on the
job?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

31. Were you concerned about physical injury to your patients while you
were working in the hospital?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

32. In general, did you experience communication problems with other
nurses?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

33. While on this assignment were you able to adequately meet the
physical needs of the patients?
1. NO

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

34. Do you remember many nursing tasks as unpleasant on this assignment?
1. NO

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

35. On this assignment, did new staff need to be oriented frequently?
1. NO

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

�36. Were your expectations of what you would be doing as a military
nurse on this assignment realistic?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

37. How stressful was it for you to perform procedures that patients
experienced as painful or embarrassing? Would you say:
1. Very stressful,
2. Moderately stressful, or
3. Only mildly stressful
9. NOT SURE/DK
38. How frequently did you need to operate specialized equipment with
which you were unfamiliar? Would you say:
1. Often,
2.

Sometimes, or

3. Never
9.

NOT SURE/DK

39. Did you personally need to make rapid decisions:
1. Often,
2. Sometimes, or
3. Never
9. NOT SURE/DK
40. Was there adequate opportunity to share your experiences and
feelings with other personnel?
1.

41.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

Were there frequently large numbers of admissions at one time?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

42. Were non-nursing tasks often required of you?
1. NO

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

�43. Were you frequently without a physician available during medical
emergencies?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

44. Were you frustrated by the inability to take scheduled breaks or
days off.
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

45. Do you remember many patients dying while you were on this
assignment?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

46. Were you able to follow up on the condition of your patients after
they left your care?
YES

1. NO

2.

9.

46.1 Did you follow up on the condition of your patients?

DK

I

1. NO

2. YES

9. DK

47. Did you take care of patients who were not Americans?
1. NO

9.

I

DK

2.

YES

i

47.1 Who were they?

47.2

Did you have emotional problems in dealing with
these patients?
YES

1. NO

2.

9. DK

V

(What nationality were they?)

47.2a

I

What types of problems?

�48. On this assignment was military nursing satisfying to you in that you had
the feeling of having helped your patients?
1.

NO

2.

YES

9.

NOT SURE/DK

49. Did you receive feedback from your patients on-the nursing .care that you
had given them?
1. NO

2. YES

9. NOT SURE/DK

These next few questions ask about your current nursing status.
50. Are you currently employed as a nurse?
2. YES

1. NO
9.

DK

I SKIP TO QUESTION 51 I

i

50.a How many years after this assignment did you
leave nursing?
01. 0 - 3 YEARS
02. &gt; 3 £.5 YEARS

03. &gt; 5 ; . 7 YEARS
£
04. &gt; 7 £ 10 YEARS
05. &gt; 10 YEARS
06.

NOT CURRENTLY EMPLOYED AS A NURSE, BUT HASN'T LEFT
NURSING

99.

DK

51. What is the highest nursing degree you have earned up until now?
01. A.D.
02. R.N.
03.

BACHELORS IN NURSING

04.

MASTERS IN NURSING

05.

DOCTOR OF NURSING SCIENCE/PH.D. IN NURSING

06. OTHER (SPECIFY):
99. DK

�VETERANS SERVICES
[INTERVIEWER CHECK: IF RESPONDENT IS CURRENTLY IN THE MILITARY SKIP TO
QUESTION # 3]

Now I would like to ask you some questions about some programs for veterans.
1. Have you had any contact at all with the Veterans Administration since
you got out of the service?
1.

NO

9.

DK

2.

YES

I

1.1

What have you been in contact with them about as
best as you can recall? (DO NOT READ LIST -- CIRCLE
ALL THAT APPLY]
01. LIFE INSURANCE
02. EDUCATION BENEFITS
03. HOME LOAN
04. MEDICAL PROBLEMS/BENEFITS
05. DISABILITY COMPENSATION
06. EMPLOYMENT, JOB ASSISTANCE
07. DENTAL CARE
08. INFORMATION ABOUT BENEFITS
09. OTHER (SPECIFY):

2. Are you currently receiving service-connected-disability compensation from
the Veterans Administration?
1. NO
1
9.

2.

YES

I

2.1 What is your current VA disability rating?

DK

PERCENT
2.2

In what year did you first receive this rating?
19

3.

Do you currently belong to any Veterans organizations?
1. NO

2.

YES

.1.

8.1 Which ones:
(1.)
NAME

STREET ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

ZIP

NAME

STREET ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

ZIP

(2.)

�4. To the best of your knowledge, are you currently eligible for any Veterans
Administration programs?
1. NO
9. DK

I

SKIP TO
NEXT
SECTION

2.

YES

I

4.1 Which ones?

[RECORD VERBATIM AND
CIRCLE ALL THAT APPLY]

01.

HOSPITAL CARE FOR VETERANS WITH SERVICE-CONNECTED
DISABILITIES

02.

HOSPITAL CARE FOR VETERANS WITH LOW INCOMES

03.

HOSPITAL CARE IN VA FACILITIES FOR ALL VETERANS 65 AND
OVER

04.

MONEY TO HELP VETERANS COMPLETE THEIR EDUCATION UNDER THE
G.I. BILL

05.

VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION TRAINING FOR VETERANS WITH
SERVICE-CONNECTED DISABILITIES

06.

FINANCIAL COMPENSATION FOR VETERANS WITH SERVICE-CONNECTED
DISABILITIES

07.

PENSIONS FOR LOW-INCOME VETERANS

08.

NURSING HOME CARE FOR VETERANS AGED 65 AND OVER

09.

DENTAL CARE IN VA FACILITIES

10.

LIFE INSURANCE

11.

HOME LOAN GUARANTEES

12.

VOCATIONAL COUNSELING

13.

TREATMENT FOR VETERANS WITH DRINKING PROBLEMS

14.

TREATMENT FOR VETERANS WITH DRUG PROBLEMS

15.

READJUSTMENT COUNSELING

16.

PSYCHOLOGICAL COUNSELING OTHER THAN READJUSTMENT
COUNSELING

'

17.

DOMICILIARY CARE IN VA FACILITIES

'

18.

OUTPATIENT CARE AT VA FACILITIES

|

i

i

,

'

i

�OVERSEAS VOLUNTEER WORK

This question deals with any volunteer overseas assignments you may have had
apart from your work history which we've already discussed.
Did you ever go overseas or to another country as a volunteer?
through the Peace Corps, or with a religious group?
2.

For example,

YES

(a.) With what organization?
(b.) Where did you go?
(c.) When were you there?
(d.)

From when to when?

What type of volunteer work did you do?

(e.) Why did you decide to join the

?

(f.) Why did you go to this particular country?
[PROBE: Any others?]
(a)

(b)

ORGANIZATION

(c)
TIME

WHERE

(d)
TYPE OF WORK

TO
MONTH

YEAR

(e)

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

(f)

TO
MONTH

YEAR

(e)

(f)

TO
MONTH

(e)

YEAR
(f)

�PERSONAL HISTORY AND DEMOGRAPHICS

Now I have just a few general background questions.
1. What is your date of birth?

MONTH

DAY

I need the month, then the day and year.

YEAR

2. How many people live in your household (unit) including yourself?
TOTAL #
1.

LIVES ALONE

2.

LIVES WITH OTHERS
(IF ONE OTHER MENTIONED) Who is that?

(IF MORE THAN ONE OTHER) Who are they
in relation to you?
PROBE AT END: Anyone else?
[RECORD # IN EACH BOX]

a. SPOUSE/PARTNER

b. MOTHER &amp;/OR M-IN-L

c. FATHER &amp;/OR F-IN-L

d. DAUGHTERS (STEPDAUGHTERS)

e. SONS (STEPSONS)

f. SISTERS

g. BROTHERS

h. OTHER FEMALE/FEMALES

i. OTHER MALE/MALES

�Did your mother ever take DES (Diethylstylbesterol) while she was pregnant
with you or during any other pregnancy before you were conceived?
1. NO
2. DK

2. YES

3.1 Was that with you or during another pregnancy before
you were born?
1. WITH RESPONDENT
2. WITH ANOTHER PREGNANCY BEFORE RESPONDENT WAS BORN
9. DK

V
Were any of your female blood relatives ever diagnosed as having breast
cancer?
1. NO
I
9. DK

2. YES

4.1 Who was that: I don't need the name, just the
relationship to you.
[PROBE: Any other blood relatives? CIRCLE ALL THAT APPLY]
01.

MOTHER

02.

SISTER

03. MOTHER'S SISTER
04. FATHER'S SISTER
05. MATERNAL GRANDMOTHER
06.

PATERNAL GRANDMOTHER

�5.

Have you ever been fearful of having children, or of having more children
for any reason?
1. NO

2. YES

9. DK

5.1

(a) When was that, (during what years)?
(b) And, why were you afraid?
(a) 19

TO

19

(b)

V

6. While you were growing up, did anyone in your family have a drinking
problem?
1. NO
I
9. DK

2.

YES
v
6.1 Could you please tell me what that person's relationship
was to you? [PROBE: Anyone else? CIRCLE ALL THAT
APPLY]
01.

MOTHER

02.

FATHER

03.

SISTER

04.

BROTHER

05.

SON

06.

DAUGHTER

07.

HUSBAND OR PARTNER

08.

STEP-PARENT/FOSTER PARENT

09.

OTHER RELATIVE (IN-LAWS, AUNTS, UNCLES,
COUSINS, NIECES, NEPHEWS, ETC.)

10.

MYSELF

�7. Have you ever lived on a farm or ranch?
2. YES
V
FOR EACH ASK:

1. NO
9. DK

I

(a) During what years did you live on a farm or ranch?
(b) Was it a farm or a ranch?

SKIP TO
QUESTION # 8

(c) What was the street address, and the city, state
and zip code?

[PROBE:

any others?]

(a)
DATES

FARM

1

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

1

MONTH

YEAR

1

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

2

YEAR

MONTH

2

YEAR

MONTH

2

YEAR

MONTH

2

1

MONTH

2

1

TO

MONTH

(b)
RANCH

TO

TO

TO

TO

(c)
STREET ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP CODE

�8.

Did you ever live in an area that was subject to documented chemical or
toxic exposures? (TIMES BEACH, MO, LOVE CANAL, NY)
1. NO

2. YES

9. DK

[FOR EACH ASK:]

I

(a) When did you live there?
(b) What was the street address and the city, state and
zip code?

SKIP TO
QUESTION # 9

[PROBE:

any others?]
(b)

(a)
DATE S

A

STREET ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP CODE

TO

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

MONTH

YEAR

TO

TO

TO

TO

�9. Have you ever been exposed to any of the following substances in
situations other than what we've already discussed [READ a - f]
FOR EACH YES, ASK:

(a) When were you exposed?

(What were the dates?)

(b) How were you exposed?
(c) What was the street address and the city, state
and zip code of the area?

NO

DK

YES

(a)
DATES

a. Asbestos
b. Nuclear radiation
c. Industrial chemicals
d. Defoliants or herbicides
e. Insecticides or pesticides

1

f. Degreasing chemicals
10. Have you ever used insect repellant on a weekly basis for a month or more?
1. NO

9.

DK

2.

YES

10.1 When was this?

[PROBE FOR YEARS]

�(b)
HOW

(c)
STREET ADDRESS
CITY, STATE, ZIP CODE

�11. And, what state were you born in?
[INTERVIEWER NOTE: IF R BORN OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES, RECORD THE
COUNTRY OF BIRTH.]
STATE OR COUNTRY OF BIRTH

12.

How would you describe your ethnic background?

[CIRCLE ALL MENTIONED]

01. IRISH

11. SCOTTISH

02. ENGLISH

12. WELSH

03. FRENCH OR FRENCH CANADIAN

13. GERMAN, AUSTRIAN, SWISS

04. GREEK

14. SWEDISH, FINNISH, DANISH, NORWEGIAN

05. ITALIAN

15. NO PARTICULAR ETHNIC BACKGROUND

06. BLACK, AFRO-AMERICAN

16. OTHER (SPECIFY:)

07. JEWISH
08. HISPANIC, SPANISH

77. REFUSED

09. POLISH

99. NOT SURE/DK

10. RUSSIAN

13.

What is your religious preference now?

Are you:

01. Catholic,
02. Jewish,
03. Protestant, or
04. Something else? (SPECIFY):
05. NO RELIGION

14.

What religion were you raised in?
01. CATHOLIC
02. JEWISH
03. PROTESTANT
04. SOMETHING ELSE
05. NO RELIGION

(SPECIFY):

________

�15. Which of the following groups do you consider yourself to be a part of?
01. White, Non-Hispanic
02. Black, Non-Hispanic
03. White - Hispanic
04. Black - Hispanic, or
05. Asian or Pacific Islander
06. OTHER
99. DK

16. Which of the following groups represents the total income during the past 12
months for all members in your household added together. Think of all
possible sources of income such as wages, salaries, social security, interest
income and so forth. Is it:
01. Less than $5,000
02. $5,000 - $9,999
03. $10,000 - $19,999
04. $20,000 - $29,999
05. $30,000 - $39,999

06. $40,000 - $49,999
07. $50,000 - $79,999
08. $80,000 - $99,999
09. OVER $100,000
77. REFUSED
99. DK

�INTERVIEWER CHECK:

1. NO

WERE THERE ANY "CODE REDS"?

2. YES

We would like to obtain copies of your medical records. We
will mail you a release form in the near future. Please sign
it and return it promptly. Thank you again.
In order for us to re-contact you, should we need to do so, I'd like to get
the name, address and phone number of someone who does not live in your
household, but who is likely to know how to reach you.
NAME
LAST

FIRST

MI

CITY

STATE

ZIP CODE

STREET ADDRESS

TELEPHONE NUMBER

(

)

Thank you, this concludes our interview. If you have any comments regarding
the interview in general or the questions I have asked please tell me and I
will jot them down.

�[PLEASE COMPLETE AFTER EACH INTERVIEW]

INTERVIEWER'S NOTES

1. Please rate how comfortable Respondent was during interview.
Not at all
comfortable
1

Very
comfortable
2

3

4

5

2. Please rate how cooperative Respondent was during interview.
Not at all
cooperative
1

Very
cooperative
2

3

4

5

3. Did the Respondent have difficulty answering any of the questions?
1. NO

2. YES

&gt;Which ones?

4. Do you feel that the Respondent gave inaccurate or misleading information
in any of the questions?
1. NO

2. YES

&gt;Which ones?

5. Were there any unusual circumstances at the time of the interview (e.g., R
had difficulty hearing, concentrating, or there were frequent interruptions, etc.)?
1. NO

2. YES

&gt;Which ones?

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