| Chapter 4 | ||
| Figure 4.1. | Overview of Deployments by Type of Mission, 1992–2009. | 25 |
| Figure 4.2. | Division of Missions by Country, 1992–2009. | 25 |
| Figure 4.3. | Total Number of Deployments by Mission, 1992–2009. | 26 |
| Figure 4.4. | Number of First Deployments and All Deployments, 1992–2009. | 27 |
| Figure 4.5. | Deployments from 1992 to 2009 by Number of Times Each Soldier Was Deployed. | 27 |
| Figure 4.6. | Age of Soldiers Deployed for the First Time. | 29 |
| Figure 4.7. | Proportion of Women among First-timers by Year of Deployment. | 29 |
| Figure 4.8. | Proportion of First-timers Who are Immigrants or Descendants of Immigrants by Year of Deployment. | 30 |
| Figure 4.9. | Proportion of First-timers Who were in Out-of-home Care during Their Upbringing, by Year of Military Deployment. | 32 |
| Figure 4.10. | Average Results on the BPP Intelligence Test for Deployed and Not-deployed Eligible for Military Service, 1976–1987 (Year of Birth). | 33 |
| Figure 4.11. | Average BPP Results for Deployed and Not-deployed Women Eligible for Military Service, 1976–1987. | 34 |
| Figure 4.12. | First-timers by Income (in 2,000 prices), 1992–2009. | 34 |
| Figure 4.13. | Per cent of Income of Soldiers on Their First Deployment, by Mission (in 2,000 Prices), 1992–2009. | 35 |
| Figure 4.14. | Socio-economic Status of Men the Year before the First Field Deployment, 1992–2009. | 36 |
| Figure 4.15. | Deployed Who Were Employed the Year before Their First Mission. Unskilled and Blue-collar Employees, 1992–2009. | 37 |
| Figure 4.16. | Convictions for Property Crimes before and in the Year of Deployment, for First-timers and Men Aged 15–59 in the General Population. | 38 |
| Figure 4.17. | Convictions for Violent Crimes by Year of Deployment and Separately for First-timers and Men in the Population Aged 15–59 Years. | 39 |
| Figure 4.18. | Convictions among the Deployed by Year of Deployment, 1992–2009. | 39 |
| Figure 4.19. | Proportion of Repatriated Soldiers and Deployments by Location of Mission. | 40 |
| Figure 4.20. | Causes of Wounds for All Missions, 1992–2009. | |
| Figure 4.21. | Proportion of Wounded by Country of Mission. | 42 |
| Figure 4.22. | Causes of Death. | 43 |
| Chapter 6 | ||
| Figure 6.1. | Civilian Status of Veterans According to Number of Deployments and Employment Status (%). | 69 |
| Figure 6.2. | Veterans According to the Number of Children, by Employment Status and One or More Than One Deployment. | 71 |
| Figure 6.3. | Veterans’ Current Housing Situation, Proportion with Owned Property or Rented Property. Divided by Employment Status and Deployment on One or More than One Mission. | 72 |
| Figure 6.4. | Veterans by Number of Years Since Their Last Deployment and Whether They Are Still in Service. | 73 |
| Figure 6.5. | Veterans Classified by Volunteer Status on Entry into the Military, by Employment Status and One or More Than One Deployment. | 75 |
| Figure 6.6. | Background for Leaving the Military of Veterans No Longer in Service, by One or More Than One Deployment. | 77 |
| Figure 6.7. | Veterans Sent on Single or Multiple Deployments by Year of Deployment. | 81 |
| Figure 6.8. | Veterans Categorised by Per cent of Family Members Deployed Previously. | 82 |
| Figure 6.9. | Reasons for Repatriation. | 92 |
| Figure 6.10. | Share of Veterans Who Have Dealt with Various Support Services, Categorised as Repatriated and Wounded, and Those with Self-assessed Damage. | 100 |
| Chapter 7 | ||
| Figure 7.1. | Overview of the Soldiers on ISAF 11 (PE) and UNIFIL 4 (PK) Missions and Number of Deployments Includes All Previously Deployed Soldiers Who Answered Questions about Their Motivations before and after Deployment (n = 447). | 109 |
| Figure 7.2. | Yearly Net Debt, by Amount Interval, from Two Years before to Five Years after Deployment. Deployed between 1999 and 2004. 2,000 Prices. | 124 |
| Figure 7.3. | Median Values for Net Debt by Age Group for Each Year from Two Years before to Five Years after Deployment. Deployed between 1999 and 2004. 2,000 Prices. | 125 |
| Figure 7.4. | Share of One-time and Many-time Deployed Soldiers Who Committed Crimes in the Years before, during and after the Year of Deployment. | 132 |
| Figure 7.5. | The Share of One-time and Many-time Deployed Soldiers Who Committed Violent Crimes in the Years before during and after the Year of Deployment. | 133 |
| Figure 7.6. | Annual Share of Those Committing a Crime among the Control and the Deployed Group, Divided into the One-time and the Many-time Deployed. | 137 |
| Figure 7.7. | Annual Share of Those Committing Violent Crimes among the Control and the Deployed Group Separately. The Deployed are Divided into the One-time and the Many-time Deployed. | 138 |
| Chapter 8 | ||
| Figure 8.1. | Psychiatric Diagnoses during 1995–2010 in Deployed and the Control Group Born in 1975–1982. | 154 |
| Figure 8.2. | Men Born in 1975–1982 with a Registered Psychiatric Diagnosis in 1995–2010, Divided into Those Deployed for the First Time in 2002 and the Control Group and into One-time and Many-time Deployed. | 155 |
| Figure 8.3. | Average Number of Psychiatric Contacts in the Period for First-time Deployed in 2002 and the Control Group. | 157 |
| Figure 8.4. | Deployed Soldiers and Controls Who Bought Mental Health Medication in 1995–2010, before and after Deployment. | 163 |
| Figure 8.5. | Soldiers Deployed for the First Time in 2002 and the Control Group Who Bought Medicine for Mental Illnesses in 1995–2010, Divided into One-time and Many-time Deployed. | 164 |
| Figure 8.6. | Average Number of Daily Doses (DDD) of Medicine for Mental Illnesses among First-time Deployed in 2002 and the Control Group. | 165 |
| Figure 8.7. | Work-related Illnesses Reported to ASK in 1997–2009 among Deployed Divided by Year in Which the Accident was Reported. | 170 |
| Figure 8.8. | Work-related Accidents Registered with FAEK in 1997–2009 by Year in Which the Accident Occurred. | 171 |
| Figure 8.9. | Deployed Men Who Died in 1992–2009 by Year, Assessed as the Total Number of Dead and Those Dying after Coming Home. | 176 |
| Figure 8.10. | Men Deployed in 1992–2009 by Cause of Death, Divided into Age Groups and Times of Death. | 178 |
| Figure 8.11. | Men Deployed in 1992–2009 Who Died, by Cause of Death and the Latest Mission. | 179 |
| Figure 8.12. | Men Deployed in 1992–2009, by Number of Deployments for Those Still Alive and Those Who Died. | 180 |
| Figure 8.13. | Men Deployed in 1992–2009 Who Died After Returning Home, by Number of Years since the Most Recent Deployment. | 181 |
| Figure 4.1. | Overview of Deployments by Type of Mission, 1992–2009. | 25 |
| Figure 4.2. | Division of Missions by Country, 1992–2009. | 25 |
| Figure 4.3. | Total Number of Deployments by Mission, 1992–2009. | 26 |
| Figure 4.4. | Number of First Deployments and All Deployments, 1992–2009. | 27 |
| Figure 4.5. | Deployments from 1992 to 2009 by Number of Times Each Soldier Was Deployed. | 27 |
| Figure 4.6. | Age of Soldiers Deployed for the First Time. | 29 |
| Figure 4.7. | Proportion of Women among First-timers by Year of Deployment. | 29 |
| Figure 4.8. | Proportion of First-timers Who are Immigrants or Descendants of Immigrants by Year of Deployment. | 30 |
| Figure 4.9. | Proportion of First-timers Who were in Out-of-home Care during Their Upbringing, by Year of Military Deployment. | 32 |
| Figure 4.10. | Average Results on the BPP Intelligence Test for Deployed and Not-deployed Eligible for Military Service, 1976–1987 (Year of Birth). | 33 |
| Figure 4.11. | Average BPP Results for Deployed and Not-deployed Women Eligible for Military Service, 1976–1987. | 34 |
| Figure 4.12. | First-timers by Income (in 2,000 prices), 1992–2009. | 34 |
| Figure 4.13. | Per cent of Income of Soldiers on Their First Deployment, by Mission (in 2,000 Prices), 1992–2009. | 35 |
| Figure 4.14. | Socio-economic Status of Men the Year before the First Field Deployment, 1992–2009. | 36 |
| Figure 4.15. | Deployed Who Were Employed the Year before Their First Mission. Unskilled and Blue-collar Employees, 1992–2009. | 37 |
| Figure 4.16. | Convictions for Property Crimes before and in the Year of Deployment, for First-timers and Men Aged 15–59 in the General Population. | 38 |
| Figure 4.17. | Convictions for Violent Crimes by Year of Deployment and Separately for First-timers and Men in the Population Aged 15–59 Years. | 39 |
| Figure 4.18. | Convictions among the Deployed by Year of Deployment, 1992–2009. | 39 |
| Figure 4.19. | Proportion of Repatriated Soldiers and Deployments by Location of Mission. | 40 |
| Figure 4.20. | Causes of Wounds for All Missions, 1992–2009. | |
| Figure 4.21. | Proportion of Wounded by Country of Mission. | 42 |
| Figure 4.22. | Causes of Death. | 43 |
| Figure 6.1. | Civilian Status of Veterans According to Number of Deployments and Employment Status (%). | 69 |
| Figure 6.2. | Veterans According to the Number of Children, by Employment Status and One or More Than One Deployment. | 71 |
| Figure 6.3. | Veterans’ Current Housing Situation, Proportion with Owned Property or Rented Property. Divided by Employment Status and Deployment on One or More than One Mission. | 72 |
| Figure 6.4. | Veterans by Number of Years Since Their Last Deployment and Whether They Are Still in Service. | 73 |
| Figure 6.5. | Veterans Classified by Volunteer Status on Entry into the Military, by Employment Status and One or More Than One Deployment. | 75 |
| Figure 6.6. | Background for Leaving the Military of Veterans No Longer in Service, by One or More Than One Deployment. | 77 |
| Figure 6.7. | Veterans Sent on Single or Multiple Deployments by Year of Deployment. | 81 |
| Figure 6.8. | Veterans Categorised by Per cent of Family Members Deployed Previously. | 82 |
| Figure 6.9. | Reasons for Repatriation. | 92 |
| Figure 6.10. | Share of Veterans Who Have Dealt with Various Support Services, Categorised as Repatriated and Wounded, and Those with Self-assessed Damage. | 100 |
| Figure 7.1. | Overview of the Soldiers on ISAF 11 (PE) and UNIFIL 4 (PK) Missions and Number of Deployments Includes All Previously Deployed Soldiers Who Answered Questions about Their Motivations before and after Deployment ( | 109 |
| Figure 7.2. | Yearly Net Debt, by Amount Interval, from Two Years before to Five Years after Deployment. Deployed between 1999 and 2004. 2,000 Prices. | 124 |
| Figure 7.3. | Median Values for Net Debt by Age Group for Each Year from Two Years before to Five Years after Deployment. Deployed between 1999 and 2004. 2,000 Prices. | 125 |
| Figure 7.4. | Share of One-time and Many-time Deployed Soldiers Who Committed Crimes in the Years before, during and after the Year of Deployment. | 132 |
| Figure 7.5. | The Share of One-time and Many-time Deployed Soldiers Who Committed Violent Crimes in the Years before during and after the Year of Deployment. | 133 |
| Figure 7.6. | Annual Share of Those Committing a Crime among the Control and the Deployed Group, Divided into the One-time and the Many-time Deployed. | 137 |
| Figure 7.7. | Annual Share of Those Committing Violent Crimes among the Control and the Deployed Group Separately. The Deployed are Divided into the One-time and the Many-time Deployed. | 138 |
| Figure 8.1. | Psychiatric Diagnoses during 1995–2010 in Deployed and the Control Group Born in 1975–1982. | 154 |
| Figure 8.2. | Men Born in 1975–1982 with a Registered Psychiatric Diagnosis in 1995–2010, Divided into Those Deployed for the First Time in 2002 and the Control Group and into One-time and Many-time Deployed. | 155 |
| Figure 8.3. | Average Number of Psychiatric Contacts in the Period for First-time Deployed in 2002 and the Control Group. | 157 |
| Figure 8.4. | Deployed Soldiers and Controls Who Bought Mental Health Medication in 1995–2010, before and after Deployment. | 163 |
| Figure 8.5. | Soldiers Deployed for the First Time in 2002 and the Control Group Who Bought Medicine for Mental Illnesses in 1995–2010, Divided into One-time and Many-time Deployed. | 164 |
| Figure 8.6. | Average Number of Daily Doses (DDD) of Medicine for Mental Illnesses among First-time Deployed in 2002 and the Control Group. | 165 |
| Figure 8.7. | Work-related Illnesses Reported to ASK in 1997–2009 among Deployed Divided by Year in Which the Accident was Reported. | 170 |
| Figure 8.8. | Work-related Accidents Registered with FAEK in 1997–2009 by Year in Which the Accident Occurred. | 171 |
| Figure 8.9. | Deployed Men Who Died in 1992–2009 by Year, Assessed as the Total Number of Dead and Those Dying after Coming Home. | 176 |
| Figure 8.10. | Men Deployed in 1992–2009 by Cause of Death, Divided into Age Groups and Times of Death. | 178 |
| Figure 8.11. | Men Deployed in 1992–2009 Who Died, by Cause of Death and the Latest Mission. | 179 |
| Figure 8.12. | Men Deployed in 1992–2009, by Number of Deployments for Those Still Alive and Those Who Died. | 180 |
| Figure 8.13. | Men Deployed in 1992–2009 Who Died After Returning Home, by Number of Years since the Most Recent Deployment. | 181 |
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