Chapter 3
Table 3.1.Completion and Drop-out Rate in the Interview Survey of Previously Deployed Veterans.15
Table 3.2.Total Response Rate in Terms of Background Factors.16
Table 3.3.The 12 Statements of Motivation in the Analysis, Classified According to Eighmey’s (2006) Typology.18
Chapter 6
Table 6.1.Veterans by Number of Deployments and Whether They are Still in Service or Not.66
Table 6.2.The Deployed Soldiers’ Ages According to Whether They Are Still in Service or Not, and Whether They Have Been Deployed Only Once, or More Than Once (Age).67
Table 6.3.Veterans Divided by Age and Sex, According to Whether They Are Still in Service or No Longer in Service, by Number of Deployments.68
Table 6.4.Veterans Divided up by Civilian Status Currently and in the Year before Deployment (%).70
Table 6.5.Veterans by Contract Type and Employment Status (%).74
Table 6.6.Educational Status of Veterans at the Time of Entry into the Military and at the Time of the Questionnaire, Divided into Those in Service and Those No Longer in Service (%).76
Table 6.7.Main Occupations for Veterans Who Have Left the Service by the Number of Years Since Their Last Deployment (%).79
Table 6.8.Veterans Deployed Once or More Than Once by Number of Years Since Deployment (%).80
Table 6.9.Veterans with Single Deployments by Type of Work.83
Table 6.10.Statements about Experiences of the One-time Deployed during the Mission.85
Table 6.11.One-time Deployed Veterans’ Rating of Enriching Statements.86
Table 6.12.Average Assessment of Enrichment Statements by Veterans in Service and Those no Longer in Service.87
Table 6.13.One-time Deployed Veterans’ Rating of Stressful and Negative Statements Statements.89
Table 6.14.One-time Deployed Who Experienced Combat, by Self-assessed Psychological Problems and Age at Deployment.93
Table 6.15.The Share of Veterans with Self-assessed Problems by Number of Years Since Last Deployment (%).94
Table 6.16.One-time Deployed with Self-assessed Problems Divided by Missions (%).95
Table 6.17.Many-time Deployed with Self-assessed Problems by Type of Mission, Based on the Most Recent Mission (%).95
Table 6.18.Male Veterans and Men in the General Population Who Often Are Alone Not by Choice.97
Table 6.19.Share of Male Veterans and of Men in the General Population Indicating That They Never or Almost Never Have Someone to Talk to If They Need to.98
Table 6.20.Male Veterans and Men in General Who Say They Have Been Very Troubled by Pain/Discomfort Within the Last 14 Days.99
Table 6.21.Share of Male Veterans and Men in the General Population Who Admit Exceeding the Danish Health Authority’s Recommended Low and High Alcohol Limits.102
Table 6.22.Male Veterans and Men in General Who Drink More Than Five Drinks on the Same Occasion at Least once a Month.103
Table 6.23.Share by Age of Male Veterans and Men in General Who Are Daily Smokers.104
Table 6.24.Per cent of Male Veterans and of Men in General Consuming Cannabis Within the Last Year, by Age (%).104
Chapter 7
Table 7.1.Soldiers’ Average Rating of 12 Areas of Motivation before and after Deployment.111
Table 7.2.Average Assessment of the Motivational Factors for Deployed Soldiers on ISAF 11 (PE) by Mission Experience and the Responses before and after Deployment.112
Table 7.3.Average Ratings of the Motivations for Deployment on UNIFIL 4 (PK), by Mission Experience and Responses before and after Deployment.113
Table 7.4.Overview of the Social Background Variables (the Structuring Variables) and Which Axes They Contribute to in the Multiple Correspondence Analysis.116
Table 7.5.Summary of Motivational Variables (Supplementary Variables) and the Axes They Contribute to in the Multiple Correspondence Analysis.117
Table 7.6.Summary of Results Shown by Outcome of the Structuring Variables and Which Quadrants They Are Placed in by the Multiple Correspondence Analysis.118
Table 7.7.Summary of Results Shown by the Outcome of Supplementary Variables Describing Self-oriented Motivations and the Quadrants They Belong to in the Multiple Correspondence Analysis.119
Table 7.8.Summary of Results Shown by the Result of Supplementary Variables Describing the Motivations Directed towards Others and the Quadrants They Belong to in the Multiple Correspondence Analysis.120
Table 7.9.Distribution of Disposable Annual Income among the Deployed, Spread over the Periods before, during and after Deployment. Deployment Period 1999–2007. 2,000 Prices (Percentages).123
Table 7.10.Analysis of Debt. Before and after the Regression Analysis for All Deployed and One-time Deployed, 1999–2007.126
Table 7.11.Socio-demographic Background Variables for Cohorts Born in 1975–1982, Shown Separately for Those Deployed for the First Time in 2002 and for the Control Group. The Variables Refer to the Status in 2001.129
Table 7.12.Effect of Deployment on Debt. Results from the Difference-in-difference Regressions.130
Table 7.13.Logistic Regression of the Likelihood of Committing a Crime for up to Two Years after the First Deployment for All Deployments and for One-mission Only Deployments in 1992–2007.134
Table 7.14.Effect of Deployment on Criminality. Results from the Difference-in-differences Regression.139
Chapter 8
Table 8.1.Deployed Soldiers by Socio-demographic Characteristics One Year before First Deployment. Deployed Registered with or without Psychiatric Diagnoses in 1995–2010 (%).144
Table 8.2.Deployed Stratified by Military Characteristics One Year before Their First Deployment. Percentage of Deployed with and without Psychiatric Diagnoses in 1995–2010 (%).146
Table 8.3.Deployed by Their Highest Ranked Psychiatric Diagnoses in 1995–2010, before and after First Deployment.148
Table 8.4.Deployed Who in 1995–2010 Were Registered with At Least One of the Psychiatric Diagnoses Shown (Diagnoses not Ranked), before and after Their First Deployment.149
Table 8.5.Deployed by Number of Years between First Deployment and First Psychiatric Diagnosis for Soldiers Deployed Once or More Than Once.150
Table 8.6.Logistic Regression of Probability of Being Registered with a Mental Illness after Deployment.152
Table 8.7.Contacts Per Person with the Psychiatric Health Care Service in 1995–2010 by Type of Contact and before and after First Deployment.156
Table 8.8.One-time and Many-time Deployed Soldiers Who Bought Mental Health Medication in 1995–2010, by Number of Years between Their First Deployment and the First Purchase.159
Table 8.9.Purchase of Medication for Mental Illness before and after First Deployment in 1995–2010.160
Table 8.10.Logistic Regression of the Probability of Purchasing Mental Health Medication after Deployment.161
Table 8.11.Reported Work-related Injuries among the Deployed in 1997–2009 According to ASK, by Year of Injury and Country in Which the Injury Occurred.168
Table 8.12.Reported Work-related Injuries among the Deployed in 1997–2009 by Degree According to ASK.169
Table 8.13.Reported Work-related Illness Recorded at ASK in 1997–2009, by Severity of the Problem.170
Table 8.14.Work-related Accidents Registered at FAEK in 1997–2007 by Country in Which the Accident Occurred.171
Table 8.15.Work-related Accidents Registered with FAEK in 1997–2009 by Degree of Severity.172
Table 8.16.Logistical Regression of Probability of Being Wounded, Repatriated or Reporting a Work-related Injury in 1997–2009.173
Table 8.17.Logistic Regression on the Probability of Dying after Deployment among Veterans in 1992–2009.177

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