Abstract

The features of the mental health of 150 servicemen (an experimental group), who perform military service in submerged command posts, are analyzed in comparison with 60 servicemen whose professional activities are outside the influence of the conditions of these points (control group). It has been established that the mental health indicators of the military personnel of the experimental group differ for the worse in comparison with the same indicators in the control group. With an increase in the duration of service in the buried points, the severity of mental disorders increases, and the level of social adaptation decreases, which necessitates an expansion of the scope of psycho-preventive measures. Within the framework of psycho-prevention, it is advisable to conduct psychocorrectional measures with the use of methods of mental self-regulation, allowing to improve the neuro-psychological adaptation of military personnel.

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