Surveillance Snapshot: Illness and Injury Burdens Among Reserve Component Members of the U.S. Armed Forces, 2023
This Surveillance Snapshot provides data from 2023 on the illness and injury burdens among reserve component members of the U.S. Armed Forces.
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The Medical Surveillance Monthly Report, a peer-reviewed journal launched in 1995, is the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Division's flagship publication. The MSMR provides monthly evidence-based estimates of the incidence, distribution, impact, and trends of health-related conditions among service members.
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This report updates prior summaries of the numbers, rates, trends, and causes of deaths among service members from all components of the U.S. Armed Forces from 2010 through 2020.
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The March 2026 MSMR features two full reports and a Surveillance Snapshot, beginning with a report on mortality rates among U.S. service members, from 2010 to 2020; followed by a report on the incidence and burden of endometriosis among U.S. active component service women, 2017 to 2024; with a Surveillance Snapshot on mid-year populations by sex, age, ...
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This brief report provides a monthly update of the leading reportable medical events for U.S. active component service members in addition to Military Health System beneficiaries.
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This Surveillance Snapshot describes the mid-year populations for U.S. active component service members of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Space Force, and Coast Guard from 2023 through 2025.
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This report utilized medical encounter data to assess the incidence and burden of endometriosis among U.S. active component service women from 2017 through 2024.
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Feb. 1, 2026
This editorial presents an overview of the CHAMPS database, illustrating the utility and opportunities for research provided by CHAMPS.
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This Surveillance Snapshot evaluates adherence to official guidance for disease and injury data reporting during two 2024 exercises, African Lion and Flintlock, in the U.S. Africa Command area of responsibility.
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This report describes the trends of tuberculosis testing and latent tuberculosis infection positivity in U.S. Army active component soldiers during the first decade following the 2013 U.S. Army Medical Command policy revision to a targeted, risk-based tuberculosis testing strategy.
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This historical review discusses how the primary challenge presented by malaria infections in the Pacific theater during World War II was an inability to return recovered soldiers quickly to their units, with nearly one percent of malaria patients repatriated for ‘chronic malaria’.
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Each month, MSMR publishes a reportable medical event update for active component service members as well as Military Health System beneficiaries, documented through the Disease Reporting System internet.
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The February 2026 MSMR features a report on the number of tuberculosis tests and diagnoses of latent tuberculosis infection in the U.S. Army; a historical review on post-infection symptoms in U.S. soldiers with malaria during World War II and its major limitation to return to duty; a Surveillance Snapshot on adherence to disease and injury ...
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This report describes the incidence, clinical characteristics, specifically prior illness or immunization, clinical course, and electrodiagnostic findings of U.S. active component service members with clinically confirmed Guillain-Barré syndrome, from 2014 through 2022.
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This study utilized self-reported racial and ethnic data from 235,608 live births to pregnant active component service members documented by the Birth and Infant Health Research program.
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This case report details the process of differential diagnosis of Ross River virus in an individual diagnosed in Queensland, Australia in 2024. The report demonstrates the need for better clinical awareness among medical care providers for U.S. service members presenting with febrile illness or joint pain following deployment to Australia.
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Last Updated: July 26, 2024