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Articles

Correlates of Perceived Military-to-Civilian Transition Challenges by Medical Release: An Analysis of the Canadian Armed Forces Transition and Well-Being Survey

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Abstract

The transition from military-to-civilian life may be difficult for military members, but early or unplanned release can be especially stressful, and may be associated with different challenges from those who planned their release. This study examined transition challenges, and identified whether associated factors differed by release type. The Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) Transition and Well-being Survey surveyed 1,414 recently released CAF Veterans (86% male; 52% 30‒49 years old; 58% Noncommissioned Members; 51% 20+ years of service; 58% Army) using a stratified random sample. Respondents indicated how challenging they perceived ten items related to the military-to-civilian transition (e.g., financial preparedness). They also were asked about their current health, release type (i.e., medical or non-medical release), demographic, and military characteristics. Results revealed that being female, releasing mid-career, having poorer health, and having fewer social provisions may place all Veterans at higher risk for transition challenges. However, certain correlates, such as age, rank, or education level, may be differentially associated with challenging transitions depending on whether Veterans released for medical or for other reasons. Identifying patterns of correlates for perceived challenges can provide insight into how to best support CAF members who are releasing for varying reasons – whether medically, or other circumstances.

Notes

1 Due to data release guidelines established by Statistics Canada, it is not possible to report the exact subsample sizes for medically and non-medically released Veterans. Only weighted counts rounded to the nearest 100 may be reported. As such, the weighted counts were n = 2,000 for medically released Veterans and n = 2,100 for non-medically released Veterans. Due to lack of precision, these are not reported within the body of the paper.

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