Surveillance snapshot: Illness and injury burdens among reserve component members of the U.S. Armed Forces, 2024
This Surveillance Snapshot presents 2024 data on the burdens of illness and injury among reserve component members of the U.S. Armed Forces.
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This report examines whether health-related quality of life—how mental, emotional, and physical capabilities affect daily functioning—is associated with service women’s readiness.
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This guest editorial from the Thermal and Mountain Medicine Division of the U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine provides recent evidence about individualized factors that may influence heat-related illness risk and strategies to prepare for training in heat.
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This report describes the investigation and findings of a major outbreak of adenovirus following the re-introduction of the adenovirus vaccine in 2011.
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July 1, 2025
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The July 2025 MSMR features four articles, with a report on a vaccine-preventable outbreak of acute respiratory illness and pneumonia associated with adenovirus at a U.S. Marine Corps training center; followed by a brief report on longitudinal associations between health-related quality of life and female service member readiness; a case report on a ...
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This letter to the editor addresses the methodology from the article Correlation Between Mean Temperature and Incidence of Tick-borne Diseases Among Active Duty Service Members in the Contiguous U.S., 2000-2023, published in the March 2025 issue of MSMR.
Article
June 1, 2025
MSMR publishes a monthly update of reportable medical events for both active component members and Military Health System beneficiaries. Military Health System care providers and public health officials document reportable medical events through the Disease Reporting System internet.
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June 1, 2025
This annual update provides more recent data on the incidence of exertional rhabdomyolysis, a pathologic muscle breakdown associated with strenuous physical activity.
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June 1, 2025
This annual update provides more recent data on the incidence of exertional hyponatremia, a condition in which water and electrolytes lost during or after heavy exertion are replaced only by water, which can lead to death or serious morbidity if left untreated.
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June 1, 2025
Since 2001, MSMR has published regular updates on the incidence of heat illness among U.S. active component service members. This update presents summaries of heat stroke and heat exhaustion case counts, incidence rates, and locations between 2020 and 2024.
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June 1, 2025
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Section 508-compliant PDF of MSMR Vol 32 No 6 June 2025
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This editorial from the U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine discusses increased research focus on the female warfighter, to improve knowledge and awareness of individualized risk management for individuals exposed to extreme terrestrial environments, both in mission-critical scenarios as well as training.
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May 1, 2025
This descriptive study examines and characterizes unintended pregnancies diagnosed after long-acting reversible contraception placement in active duty service women, including pregnancy due to long-acting reversible contraception failure as well as undetected pregnancies.
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May 1, 2025
This editorial discusses women’s health research initiatives funded by the Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs, a funding organization within the Defense Health Agency that supports research on more than 90 diseases, conditions, and topics directed by Congress.
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This update of infertility surveillance, analysis and reporting provides more recent estimates of infertility diagnosis incidence and prevalence of among active component U.S. service women. MSMR has published the incidence and prevalence of diagnosed female infertility among active component women since 2000, with assessments of annual rates of ...
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This report on sepsis hospitalizations among service women is in response to studies of sepsis among active component U.S. military members that have shown markedly increased rates of sepsis hospitalizations, especially among women, among whom rates are higher than male service members as well as the general U.S. population.
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Last Updated: September 30, 2025