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Call for Papers: Empowering Military Women’s Mission—Focusing on Military Women’s Health and its Impact on Readiness

Image of 18313582. Since the introduction of the all-volunteer force in 1973, the number of women entering the Army and Reserve components has increased significantly.

The editors of MSMR are announcing a call for papers to be published in the May 2025 issue of MSMR that will be dedicated to the health of women serving in the military, to coincide with Women’s Health Awareness Month and Women’s Health Week. The editors of MSMR are inviting researchers and investigators with an interest in women’s health issues and their relationship to the U.S. military to submit manuscripts in the coming months to be considered for the MSMR 2025 women’s health issue.

Women in Military Service

The U.S. Department of Defense has recognized that increasing gender diversity in the military is contingent upon more female recruits, which requires emphasis on the importance of recruiting and retaining women, as part of maintaining diversity within the military.1 In 2016 all gender restrictions on military service were lifted, allowing female service members to assume direct combat positions. The Defense Health Board found that active duty women have been incorporated into all military occupational specialties and proven themselves critical to DOD mission success.2 Figure 1 shows the distribution of female service members by service type from 1990 to 2023.

FIGURE 1. Distribution of Female Service Members by Service Branch, 1990-2023. This graph charts four discrete lines on the horizontal, or x-, axis, each of which represents a branch of service: Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps. The x axis is divided into 34 units of measure, each representing a calendar year from 1990 through 2023. The y-, or vertical, axis, represents the number of female service members, in units of 10,000. The Army, Navy and Air Force each had approximately 70,000 female service members at the end of the period, in 2023. The only service with a substantial increase in female service members over the period is the Navy, from just under 60,000 in 1990 to approximately 70,000 in 2023. Only the Army experienced a notable decline in female service members, from just under 85,000 in 1990. The Marine Corps has a substantially lower number of female service members, which gradually increased from around 10,000 in 1990 to more than 16,000 in 2023.

Since the introduction of the all-volunteer force in 1973, the number of women entering the Army and Reserve components has increased significantly. As a result of targeted recruiting, revised training, and greater opportunities, the total number of women in the Army increased from 12,260 in 1972 to 52,900 in 1978,3 and as of 2023 the number of active component female service members in the U.S. Armed Forces was 231,651, accounting for 17.6% of the active component force. A concurrent decline in the male service member population contributed to a relatively rapid increase in the proportion of the women serving in the U.S. military (Figure 2). As the total population of the active component force decreased from 2,040,099 in 1990 to 1,317,194 in 2023, the number of male service members decreased from 1,815,683 in 1990 to 1,194,003 in 2001, and then stabilized, meanwhile the number of female service members remained substantially unchanged.

FIGURE 2. Distribution of Service Members by Sex, 1990-2023. This chart presents a combination bar and line graph, with two discrete lines on the horizontal, or x-, axis in addition to 34 pairs of vertical bars. The x axis is divided into 34 units of measure, each representing a calendar year from 1990 through 2023. The pairs of vertical bars represent the total numbers of male and female service members in a specific year. The chart features two units of measurement on the vertical, or y-, axis, with one on each vertical axis. The left y axis represents the number of service members, in units of 500,000. The right y axis represents the percentage of female service members, in units of two percentage points. The vertical bars illustrate that the number of total female service members has remained constant over the 34-year period, at approximately 200,000 every year. Meanwhile, the number of male service members has declined, from just over 1,800,000 in 1990 to approximately 1,085,500 in 2023. One of the discrete lines along the x axis charts the total number of service members in each year; due to the fact the number of female service members remained constant, that line conforms to the pattern set by the bars illustrating the male service member population. The second discrete line charts the percentage of female service members each year, gradually climbing from 11 percent in 1990 to approximately 17.5 percent in 2023.

As military demographics continue to shape a proportionally larger female force in which the roles of women become increasingly important, there is a growing need to understand the unique challenges women face while serving, with a focus on their empowerment in addition to their retention. It is critical to evaluate whether the health needs of active component service women are appropriately managed within the military environment, taking into account their unique health concerns including occupational physical demands, gender-specific physical and mental stresses, and reproductive health issues.4

Women's Health and Its Challenges

“Women’s health” is often too narrowly focused on sexual and reproductive health, which are generally considered synonymous with gender-specific conditions or reproductive health.5,6 A focus on sexual and reproductive health is relevant but insufficient. Despite the strong need for evidence-based information to achieve better outcomes, a lack of research on women’s health persists. Women’s health burdens are under-represented in clinical research and treatment.7 Historically, women’s health needs have lagged in medical research, resulting in limited knowledge about women’s health, which has restricted the health information available to women and the quality of their health care.8 Fundamental and translational knowledge gaps specific to many women’s health conditions and diseases have inhibited generation of robust scientific data needed to provide high quality, evidence-based care to women.9

To better understand and address the health of women, especially groups of women who bear a disproportionate burden of disease, it is crucial to acknowledge women’s fundamental differences. It is also important to assess the health burdens associated with women’s health inequities by measuring years of potential life expectancy, and to consider contributing factors including race and ethnicity, socioeconomic status, age, education, geographic location, gender identity, and disability status.6 In 2023 the National Institutes of Health reported numerous health disparities between women and men in the U.S.—in addition to disparities with women in other high-income countries. Women in the U.S. have shown a slower increase in life expectancy, far behind women in other high-income countries, along with higher rates of obesity, more experiences of pain and physical disability, and more concurrent chronic conditions than men, in addition to an increase in overall maternal mortality in the U.S.5

Women’s complex health needs require health care that includes the whole woman, encompassing all the parts of the female body, all medical disciplines, and all life stages.10 Women are more likely than men to need health care throughout their lifespans, but they are also more likely to be poor, which means health care costs can put both their health and economic security at risk. Consequently, women may delay diagnosis and treatment of serious health problems, leading to poorer health.11 Women also experience different degrees or types of health problems that are dependent upon socioeconomic status. This year the World Economic Forum reported that women spend more of their lives in poor health and with greater degrees of disability, resulting in a women’s health gap that equates to 75 million years of life lost annually due to poor health or early death, or the equivalent of 7 days per year for every woman.6

Women’s health is tied to long-term economic productivity, with the development and economic performance of a country dependent upon how well it protects and promotes women’s health. Societies are more likely to demonstrate better population health overall and remain more productive for generations to come when they prioritize women’s health.12 A McKinsey Health Institute report assessing the health burden associated with health disparities among women found 10 conditions that accounted for more than 50% of detrimental economic impacts: Click to closepremenstrual syndromeA term used to describe a group of physical and behavioral changes that some women experience before their menstrual periods every month which may include may include sharp mood swings, irritability, hopelessness, anxiety, problems concentrating, changes in appetite, sleep problems, and bloating.premenstrual syndrome, depressive symptoms, migraines, other gynecological diseases, anxiety disorders, ischemic heart disease, osteoarthritis, asthma, drug use disorders, and ovarian cancer.6

A 2021 RAND report argues that investing in women’s health research produces significant societal benefits and returns over investing in general research, such as increased life-years, reduced years with disease, fewer years of functional dependence, and reductions in disruptions to work productivity.13 The McKinsey report estimated that closing the gender health gap could reduce the time women spend in poor health by almost two-thirds and add up to $1 trillion to the global economy annually by 2040. McKinsey also estimated that for every $1 invested in women's health, approximately $3 can be projected in economic growth—creating the same impact as employing 137 million women in full-time jobs by 2040.14

Women already play a critical role in the U.S. economy, making up nearly 60% of U.S. workers and 65% of the unpaid workforce of caregivers.10 One study estimating the economic burdens associated with the increases in U.S. maternal mortality rates over the past 2 decades, along with various maternal mortality disparities, found a substantial increase in potential years of lives lost and further calculated a statistical valuation, estimating a national economic burden of $27.4 billion due to maternal mortality from 2018 to 2020.15

Military Women's Health and Its Challenges

Women in the military experience health care and research inequities similar to their civilian counterparts. A recent scoping review of military women’s health research found that a significant portion of published studies either did not include active duty women as research participants or failed to examine outcomes by gender or active duty status.16 As a result, Trego and et al. conducted a military women’s health Delphi study to determine priorities for military women’s health research and reported five priority research topics: genitourinary health, sleep, physical assault, behavioral health, and menstrual cycle research.17

MSMR is dedicated to disseminating important information on women’s health within the military and has published on women’s health topics over the past decade that include vaginosis, chlamydia trachomatis, human papillomavirus, urinary tract infections, pelvic inflammatory disease, menstrual suppression, menorrhagia, fibroids, ovarian and other gynecological disorders including birth and complications, infertility, contraceptive use, breast cancer, aggressive behaviors, and mental health among military women.

In 2023, female U.S. service members were hospitalized at more than three times the rate of male service members (116.5 per 1,000 and 34.3 per 1,000, respectively), which is consistent with the national hospitalization trend for women and men ages 18-44 (95 per 1,000 and 37 per 1,000, respectively) reported in 2022. Excluding pregnancy and delivery-related conditions, hospitalization rates for women in 2023 in the U.S. military were 33.0% higher (45.6 per 1,000) than for men (34.3 per 1,000), likely due to hospitalizations for mental health disorders.18

In 2023 female U.S. service members’ annual outpatient visit rate was 87.5% higher than male service members’ rate for all illness-and injury-related visits. Even when excluding pregnancy and delivery-related visits, female service members’ outpatient visit rate in 2023 was still 70.5% higher than the male rate. In all major diagnostic categories except some specific diagnoses, women evinced illness- and injury-specific diagnoses rates 50% higher than men. The leading categories of female service members’ outpatient visits in 2023 were musculoskeletal, “other,” mental, “ill-defined,” pregnancy, neurological, genitourinary, respiratory, injury, and dermatological diagnoses.19

Musculoskeletal disorders were the most common diagnosis at outpatient clinics for female service members in 2023.19 According to a study examining intrinsic risk factors for exercise-related injuries among male and female army trainees, women are at higher risk for musculoskeletal injuries than men: at 30.1% incidence of time-loss injuries during army basic training compared to 20.2% for men.20 Other studies have reported a higher risk of MSIs in women, with one reporting a total lifetime cost (sum of medical and work loss cost) among 302 Marines (84 women and 218 men) of approximately $1.4 million (in 2019 U.S. dollars), and another demonstrating increased health care utilization due to MSIs.21,22 One study examining total costs of combat-related MSIs reported a cost per casualty of approximately $157,000, with medical costs associated with orthopedic care reaching $8.52 billion in the first year of treatment documented.23

Although these studies did not provide or investigate specific direct and indirect costs of health care utilization by female service members, service women’s higher rates of outpatient and hospitalization, including increased use of health care resources, in addition to the expenditures associated with long-term consequences of MSIs, demonstrate the importance of prevention and effective management of health problems in female service members.

According to a U.S. Government Accountability Office report, the percentage of female active duty service members tends to decrease between 10 and 20 years of service. Women are 28% more likely than men to leave military service due to gender discrimination in health care, reproductive health needs, higher rates of MSIs and mental health issues, in addition to serious invisible injuries such as UTIs, with detrimental immediate impacts on military fitness and readiness.1,24 In 2023, the largest proportion of female service members was in the 20-24-year age group (31.7%), followed by 25-29 years (24.6%), and then 30-34 years (16.8%), comprising a female majority in the U.S. military of childbearing age (Figure 3). These demographics also highlight the importance of understanding and investigating general health issues women may face during their service, including contraceptive use as well as unintended pregnancy, and providing the support they need to meet their health needs.25

FIGURE 3. Distribution of Female U.S. Service Members by Age Group, 1990–2023. This graph charts six discrete lines on the horizontal, or x-, axis, each of which represents a specific age group of female service members, in years: under age 20, ages 20 through 24, ages 25 through 29, ages 30 through 34, ages 35 through 39, and ages 40 and older. The x axis is divided into 34 units of measure, each representing a calendar year from 1990 through 2023. The y-, or vertical, axis, represents the number of female service members, in units of 10,000. The greatest numbers of female service members are consistently within the 20 through 24 age population, ranging from around 63,000 to about 83,000 throughout the 34-year period. The age group with the second highest numbers of female service members is the 25 through 29 age group, which declines from 60,000 in 1990 by nearly 20,000 in 2001, but has steadily risen ever since to again register around 60,000 female service members in 2023. The 30 through 34 age group mirrors the pattern of the 25 through 29 age group, declining from just under 40,000 in 1990 by nearly 10,000 at the end of the 1990s but rising steadily ever since to again register just under 40,000 female service members in 2023. The 35 through 39 age group evinced the greatest consistency, fluctuating between 20,000 and 26,000 service members, but rising steadily over the last eight years. The oldest age group, 40 and older, rose steadily for the first 15 years from around 8,000 service members to approximately 19,000 in 2004, and has remained fairly constant since then. The youngest age group, under age 20, demonstrates the same pattern of variability as the next youngest age group, ages 20 through 24, but less than the 20,000 population range, alternating with the age 40 and older group as the age group with the smallest population of female service members.

Advancing Research on Military Women's Health

President Biden’s March 18, 2024 executive order advancing women’s health research and innovation will require more research that prioritizes women’s health within the federal research portfolio, to translate knowledge into impact to improve the health of all women.26 Given their crucial role and the challenging environments in which female service members currently perform vital operations,3 it is critical to identify the challenges they face in the military and recognize gaps in knowledge about their health needs, particularly in military settings.

Improving women’s health requires an understanding of the determinants of disease, function, and well-being in women, in addition to the ability to intervene in relation and response to those determinants.8 To provide effective care for women, gender-specific research, knowledge, and approaches to treatment are essential.10 Quality research into women’s health is critical for preventing and mitigating potential detrimental impacts on women’s health. To estimate the economic impact of women’s health, not only the medical costs due to medical encounters and hospitalizations, but the long-term physical as well as mental burdens thereafter, need to be quantified.

The health of women serving in the military is affected by gender-specific health conditions as well as general environmental conditions that can affect each woman differently. Due to the growing role and importance of women in the military, continued and improved research is needed to support them, through a variety of studies.

Submissions for the May 2025 women’s health issue of MSMR may consider any number of aspects, including preparedness, gender-specific risk assessment, prevention efforts, quality of care, health care expenditures and utilization, as well as health issues that may be differentiated from major health issues routinely studied. The editors of MSMR look forward to receiving submissions via email to the editor at dha.ncr.health-surv.mbx.msmr@health.mil. For detailed information on criteria for MSMR submissions, please visit Instructions for Authors on Health.mil. Manuscripts should be submitted no later than February 2, 2025 to be considered for publication in the issue.

References

  1. U.S. Government Accountability Office. Report to Congressional Committees: Female Active-Duty Personnel–Guidance and Plans Needed for Recruitment and Retention Efforts, GAO-20-61. United States Government. 2020. Accessed Jul. 23, 2024. https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-20-61.pdf
  2. Defense Health Board. Defense Health Board Report: Active Duty Women's Health Care Services. U.S. Dept. of Defense. 2020. Updated Nov. 5, 2020. Accessed Jul. 11, 2024. https://www.health.mil/Reference-Center/Reports/2020/11/05/Active-Duty-Womens-Health-Care-Services 
  3. Department of the Army. Women in the Army. Army.mil. U.S. Dept. of Defense. Accessed Aug. 9, 2024. https://www.army.mil/women/history
  4. Committee on Health Care for Underserved Women. Committee Opinion 547: Health Care for Women in the Military and Women Veterans. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. 2022. Accessed Sep. 2, 2024. https://www.acog.org/clinical/clinical-guidance/committee-opinion/articles/2012/12/health-care-for-women-in-the-military-and-women-veterans
  5. National Institutes of Health. Advancing Science for the Health of Women: The 2019-2023 Trans-NIH Strategic Plan for Women’s Health Research. 2023. Accessed Jul. 19, 2024. https://orwh.od.nih.gov/sites/orwh/files/docs/ORWH_Strategic_Plan_2019_02_21_19_V2_508C.pdf 
  6. World Economic Forum, McKinsey Health Institute. Closing the Women’s Health Gap: A $1 Trillion Opportunity to Improve Lives and Economies–Insight Report, January 2024. 2024. Accessed Jul. 22, 2024. https://www.weforum.org/publications/closing-the-women-s-health-gap-a-1-trillion-opportunity-to-improve-lives-and-economies 
  7. Tobb K, Kocher M, Bullock-Palmer RP. Underrepresentation of women in cardiovascular trials–it is time to shatter this glass ceiling. Am Heart J Plus. 2022;13:100109. doi:10.1016/j.ahjo.2022.100109
  8. Institute of Medicine (US) Committee on Women's Health Research. Research on determinants of women’s health. In: Women’s Health Research: Progress, Pitfalls, and Promise. National Academies Press;2010. doi:10.17226/12908 
  9. Temkin SM, Noursi S, Regensteiner JG, Stratton P, Clayton JA. Perspectives from Advancing National Institutes of Health Research to Inform and Improve the Health of Women: a conference summary. Obstet Gynecol. 2022;140(1):10-19. doi:10.1097/AOG.0000000000004821 
  10. Deloitte. The Future of Health Is Female: Understanding the Impact of Women+Health on Society. 2021. Accessed Jul. 22, 2024. https://www2.deloitte.com/us/en/pages/life-sciences-and-healthcare/articles/impact-of-womens-health-on-society.html 
  11. Borchelt G. The impact poverty has on women’s health. Human Rights Magazine. 2018;43(3). Accessed Jul. 22, 2024. https://www.americanbar.org/groups/crsj/publications/human_rights_magazine_home/the-state-of-healthcare-in-the-unitedstates/poverty-on-womens-health 
  12. Onarheim KH, Iversen JH, Bloom DE. Economic benefits of investing in women's health: a systematic review. PLoS One. 2016;11(3):e0150120. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0150120 
  13. Baird MD, Zaber MA, Chen A, et al. Research Funding for Women's Health: Modeling Societal Impact. RAND;2021. Accessed Jul. 30, 2024. https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RRA708-4.html   
  14. Ellingrud K, Pérez L, Petersen A, Sartori V. McKinsey Health Institute. Closing the Women’s Health Gap: A $1 Trillion Opportunity to Improve Lives and Economies. McKinsey & Company;2024. Accessed Jul. 22, 2024. https://www.mckinsey.com/mhi/our-insights/closing-the-womens-health-gap-a-1-trillion-dollar-opportunity-to-improve-lives-and-economies 
  15. White RS, Lui B, Bryant-Huppert J, et al. Economic burden of maternal mortality in the USA, 2018-2020. J Comp Eff Res. 2022;11(13):927-933. doi:10.2217/cer-2022-0056   
  16. Iobst SE, Best N, Smith DC,et al. Promoting military women’s health through research design. Mil Med. 2023;188(3-4):71-76. doi:10.1093/milmed/usac310 
  17. Trego LL, Deuster PA. Introduction to women in combat. Mil Med. 2023;188(Suppl 4):1-2. doi:10.1093/milmed/usac358   
  18. Armed Forces Health Surveillance Division. Hospitalizations among active component members of the U.S. Armed Forces, 2023. MSMR. 2024;31(6):11-18.   
  19. Armed Forces Health Surveillance Division. Ambulatory health care visits among active component members of the U.S. Armed Forces, 2023. MSMR. 2024;31(6):19-25.   
  20. Jones BH, Bovee MW, Harris JM, Cowan DN. Intrinsic risk factors for exercise-related injuries among male and female army trainees. Am J Sports Med. 1993;21(5):705-710. doi:10.1177/036354659302100512   
  21. Lovalekar M, Keenan KA, Beals K, et al. Incidence and pattern of musculoskeletal injuries among women and men during Marine Corps training in sex-integrated units. J Sci Med Sport. 2020;23(10):932-936. doi:10.1016/j.jsams.2020.03.016 
  22. Krauss MR, Garvin NU, Boivin MR, Cowan DN. Excess stress fractures, musculoskeletal injuries, and health care utilization among unfit and overweight female Army trainees. Am J Sports Med. 2017;45(2):311-316. doi:10.1177/0363546516675862 
  23. Hering K, Fisher MWA, Dalton MK, et al. Health-care utilization and expenditures associated with long-term treatment after combat and non-combat-related orthopaedic trauma. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2022;104(10):864-871. doi:10.2106/JBJS.21.01124 
  24. Nolan M. Women’s health can no longer be an afterthought in the military. The Hill. 2022. Accessed Jul. 25, 2024. https://thehill.com/opinion/national-security/3746537-womens-health-can-no-longer-be-an-afterthought-in-the-military 
  25. Witkop CT, Kostas-Polston EA, Degutis LC. Improving the health and readiness of military women. Mil Med. 2023;188:8-14. doi:10.1093/milmed/usac354 
  26. Office of Research on Women’s Health, National Institutes of Health. President Biden Issues Executive Order on Advancing Women’s Health Research and Innovation. U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services. 2024. Accessed Jul. 25, 2024. https://orwh.od.nih.gov/in-the-spotlight/all-articles/president-biden-issues-executive-order-on-advancing-womens-health-research-and-innovation

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