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Charles W. Hoge

Researcher at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

Publications -  170
Citations -  27336

Charles W. Hoge is an academic researcher from Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Population. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 165 publications receiving 25543 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles W. Hoge include Defense Health Agency & Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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Prevalence of Mental Health Problems, Treatment Need, and Barriers to Care among Primary Care-Seeking Spouses of Military Service Members Involved in Iraq and Afghanistan Deployments

TL;DR: The data show spouses have similar rates of mental health problems compared to soldiers, and services were most often received from primary care physicians, rather than specialty mental health professionals, which may relate to the lack of availability ofmental health services for spouses on military installations.
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Millennium Cohort: the 2001-2003 baseline prevalence of mental disorders in the U.S. military.

TL;DR: These analyses suggest that although the Millennium Cohort compares favorably to other populations, there are military subpopulations, including women, younger, less educated, single, white, short-term service, enlisted, and Army members, who are at greater odds for some mental disorders.
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Estimating population prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder: An example using the PTSD checklist

TL;DR: The PCL's ability to accurately estimate PTSD prevalence varied as a function of cutoff and true PTSD prevalence, and uncalibrated use of the PCL for prevalence estimation may lead to large errors.
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Importance of anonymity to encourage honest reporting in mental health screening after combat deployment.

TL;DR: This study indicates that the Post-Deployment Health Assessment screening process misses most soldiers with significant mental health problems, and further efforts are required to reduce the stigma of reporting and improve willingness to receive care formental health problems.
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Vaccination against shigellosis with attenuated Shigella flexneri 2a strain SC602.

TL;DR: Although the apparent window of safety is narrow, SC602 is the first example of an attenuated S. flexneri 2a candidate vaccine that provides protection against shigellosis in a stringent, human challenge model.