Abstract

BackgroundThe Millennium Cohort Study is a longitudinal cohort study designed in the late 1990s to evaluate how military service may affect long-term health. The purpose of this investigation was to examine characteristics of Millennium Cohort Study participants who responded to the open-ended question, and to identify and investigate the most commonly reported areas of concern.MethodsParticipants who responded during the 2001-2003 and 2004-2006 questionnaire cycles were included in this study (n = 108,129). To perform these analyses, Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA) was applied to a broad open-ended question asking the participant if there were any additional health concerns. Multivariable logistic regression was performed to examine the adjusted odds of responding to the open-text field, and cluster analysis was executed to understand the major areas of concern for participants providing open-ended responses.ResultsParticipants who provided information in the open-ended text field (n = 27,916), had significantly lower self-reported general health compared with those who did not provide information in the open-ended text field. The bulk of responses concerned a finite number of topics, most notably illness/injury, exposure, and exercise.ConclusionThese findings suggest generalized topic areas, as well as identify subgroups who are more likely to provide additional information in their response that may add insight into future epidemiologic and military research.

Highlights

  • The Millennium Cohort Study is a longitudinal cohort study designed in the late 1990s to evaluate how military service may affect long-term health

  • 1990s to determine how military service may affect longterm health [6]. Those invited to participate in Panel 1 of the Millennium Cohort Study were randomly selected from all US military personnel, over sampling female service members, Reserve/National Guard service members, and those who had been previously deployed to southwest Asia, Bosnia, or Kosovo from 1998 through 2000, to ensure sufficient power to detect differences in smaller subgroups of the population

  • Limited research exists on the characteristics of individuals who choose to provide additional information as part of an optional open-ended text field on a survey

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Summary

Introduction

The Millennium Cohort Study is a longitudinal cohort study designed in the late 1990s to evaluate how military service may affect long-term health The purpose of this investigation was to examine characteristics of Millennium Cohort Study participants who responded to the open-ended question, and to identify and investigate the most commonly reported areas of concern. Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA) provides a method for open-ended text analysis using sophisticated statistical and mathematical algorithms [1]. This method reveals subtle textual meaning using an automated approach that eliminates potential human bias and permits rapid coding of large amounts of data [2]. Modest assessments of LSA’s functionality for open-ended text responses have shown promising results [5], opening the field of large-scale

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