The Temperament and Character of Korean Male Conscripts with Military Maladjustment-A Preliminary Study
Article information
Abstract
Objective
Recently, an increasing number of Korean male conscripts have been retiring because of military maladjustment despite the presence of qualifying medical and psychological screening tests in the Korean army. These problems suggest the presence of a common personality problem. To further examine this possibility, the present study used Cloninger's psychobiological model to investigate the temperament and character of soldiers suffering from military maladjustment.
Methods
Seventy-nine maladjusted male conscripts and eighty-seven controls enrolled at the 1596th unit from April 2011 to June 2012 participated in the present study. To measure participant personality, we used the Korean version of the Temperament and Character Inventory, Revised-Short. We used logistic regression analysis to examine the association between TCI-RS scores and risk of military maladjustment.
Results
The maladjustment group had a lower rank, socioeconomic status, education level, and a shorter duration of military service than the control group. The harm avoidance and self-transcendence scores were significantly higher in the maladjustment group, with lower scores for reward dependence, persistence, self-directedness, and cooperativeness scores. However, of these measures, only low cooperativeness was associated with an increased risk of military maladjustment.
Conclusion
These results suggest that a low level of cooperativeness can predict military inadequacy. Maladjusted male conscripts may have different personality characteristics from normals. To validate our results, further follow-up or cohort studies with a larger sample will be required.
INTRODUCTION
In the Korean army, maladjusted male conscripts are transferred to the deliberative committee on military maladjustment when they severely has suffered from the distress of military life as a result of mental problem or illness without major psychiatric disorders although the intensive psychiatric interventions and extensive administrative actions.1 If the deliberative committee determines them to be unfit for service, they are admitted to a military service assessment unit to jud-ge their suitability finally for the military over the course of 2 weeks.2
In 2009 and 2010, 486 and 776 Korean male conscripts, respectively, were admitted to that unit. In 2011, the number grew to 838.3 This trend of increasing military maladjustment poses a serious problem because it has causes the party and his family members great anguish and also can prove devastating to the morale and force of the unit. Given that such conscripts passed the medical and psychological screening tests upon conscription, these later problems adapting to military life suggest that they have a common characteristic that renders them vulnerable to the stresses of the military lifestyle.
Personality is likely to be one of the common characteristic to cause the male conscripts maladjusted to military life. Because the personality trait is a feature that regarded as a predisposition or risk factor for several psychiatric diseases that also independently affect the prevalence and relapse of mental illness.4,5 Moreover, the basic concept of personality implies a unique individual adaptation to a broad range of personal and social situations.6
The notion of personality includes temperament and character, with temperament defined as an individual manifestation of the level of a response to an emotional expression, mood change, and/or stimulus. Temperament is inherited, independent, and expressed mainly by both biochemical and genetic factors. Character, on the other hand, is a kind of uni-que adaptability to the environment that is transferred through generations and formed by the interaction of genetic differences and environmental influence.7,8
The Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI) has been used broadly to assess these aspects of personality.9 Originally developed by Cloninger, it consists of seven domains, defined as harm avoidance (HA), novelty seeking (NS), reward dependence (RD), persistence (P), self-directedness (SD), cooperativeness (C), and self-transcendence (ST).10
The previous mainstream studies about military maladjustment sought to identify the factors related to unsuitability or focus of the soldiers with adjustment disorder.11-15
With regard to personality studies using military samples, Radamaken and colleagues16 found that early emotional trauma is related to adult personality impulse control problems and interpersonal behavior issues, of which SD and C are effective predictors. Elsass et al.17 found that TCI successfully predicted soldier vulnerability to military stress.
However, there are only a few studies of personality involving Korean male conscripts with maladjustment so severe that they were unable to continue active duty service. To address this gap in the literature, we compared the personality of male conscripts with military maladjustment in a military service assessment unit to that of normal soldiers using the TCI based on Cloninger's psychobiological theory conducting the cross-sectional, case-control study.
METHODS
Participants
The maladjusted male conscripts were recruited from the military service assessment department of the 1596th unit and controls were randomly recruited from the medics at the medical department of it between April 2011 and June 2012. The maladjusted male conscripts had been transferred to it after passing two levels of meticulous inspections by the deliberative committee on military maladjustment operated on division-size unit and the psychiatric department of military hospital respectively.
In this military service assessment department, all maladjusted male conscripts had been administered to the Structured Inventory of Malingered Symptomatology (SIMS)18 and the Miller Forensic Assessment of Symptoms Test (M-FAST)19 to detect the exaggerating or feigning the psychiatric symptoms as the routine work-up irrespective of this study, which are the useful screening instruments to rule out the false sym-ptoms in forensic populations.20,21 It indicates malingering if the total SIMS scores are >14 or M-FAST >7.18,19 The 23 maladjusted male conscripts were excluded before enrollment through this process. Our study was approved by the institute review board of the Korean Armed Medical Forces and the advantages and disadvantages of participation were explained to each male conscripts and their written informed consent was provided before enrollment.
The diagnoses were made by two military psychiatrists through the clinical interview according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 4th edition (DSM-IV). Demographic variables were obtained from the interview and by review of the military medical charts and personnel records files. All psychiatric assessment of the participants were conducted for 2 weeks in this unit. 97 maladjusted male conscripts and 88 controls were included at the first time. Participants who suffered from mental retardation, suspicious malingering or malingering, or who expressed disagreement with the study were excluded. Of 185 male conscripts, 19 were excluded (12 suspicious malingering; 2 mental retardation; 4 disagreed with the study in the maladjustment group, and 1 control group participant that was a patient with adjustment disorder). The final analyzed sample consisted of 79 maladjusted male conscripts and 87 controls (total=166).
Measurement
We used the Korean Version of the Temperament and Ch-aracter Inventory, Revised-Short (TCI-RS).22 The TCI is a 240-item self-report questionnaire designed to evaluate four tem-perament (HA, NS, RD, P) and three character domains (SD, C, ST). NS involves in the degree of behavioral activation in response to novelty and signals of reward or relief from punishment. Behavioral inhibition occurs in response to signals of punishment or non-reward, with individual differences in inhibitablity characterized as being HA. RD represents succor and attachment, which strongly oppose feelings of rejection and disgust. P measures individual differences in behavioral maintenance without reinforcement to accomplish intellectual goals linked to communication and creativity. SD is the expression of a life guided by a sense of hope that allows a realistic acceptance of reality even if it appears to be inconsistent with past experiences. C measures the legislative function of judgment, which involves making rules that allow one to get along in a reasonable and flexible manner with others. ST measures the judicial function or depth of insight that allows one to know intuitively when legislative rules apply to a particular situation.10 The TCI-RS is a shorter, 140-item form of the TCI that is psychometrically reliable and valid.22
Statistical analysis
To compare the demographic and clinical characteristics between groups, we calculated the means, standard deviations, distributions and frequency for each variables. The normality of the continuous variables between groups were assessed by the Kolmogorov-Smirov test. The difference between duration of services, education were tested using Mann-Whitney tests. Fisher's exact test was used to examine differences between rank, religion, SES showing the expected frequency was less than 5.
The scores of TCI-RS between two groups were compared by an analysis of covariance controlling for duration of service and education. To evaluate the predictive power of temperament and character yielding significant t-test results, we conducted a logistic regression analysis with adjustment for age, rank, SES, duration of education.
All analyses were performed using SPSS 18.0 with significance established at p<0.05.
RESULTS
Demographics
The baseline demographics of the study groups partially differed (Table 1). In particular, those in the Maladjustment group had a lower rank, socioeconomic status (SES), and education level, and a shorter duration of military service than those in the control group. Adjustment disorders and personality disorders were the two most common diagnoses in the maladjustment group.
Assessment of personality
Table 2 shows the TCI-RS scores for the two groups. With the exception of the NS, the groups differed markedly in the TCI domains. In particular, the HA and ST scores were higher for the maladjusted participants while the RD, P, SD, and C scores were higher in the controls.
Association between TCI-RS scores and risk of military maladjustment
Table 3 shows the odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for military maladjustment according to the TCI-RS. The low C score was the only variable accounting for increased risk of military maladjustment. Also, this association remained significant after adjusting for age, rank, duration of education, and SES, none of which were significantly associated with military maladjustment.
DISCUSSION
This study showed that maladjusted male conscripts had different demographic and personality characteristics from normal male conscripts. In particular, low C scores significantly predicted risk of military maladjustment.
The maladjusted group had a lower SES and a lower level of education than the controls. This is important given that low SES has been identified as a risk factor for several mental disorders including personality disorder.23-26 However, this finding is inconsistent in military samples.27-29 These discrepancies may be attributable to the screening tests used during recruiting, thus leading to a decrease in the SES differences.
The level of education has also been inconsistent in previous military studies.29-31 However, most studies on Korean male conscripts indicate that a lower level of education predicts a greater likelihood of psychological disturbances and psychiatric problems.27,28,32 Studies with a larger sample and a robust design may be required to clarify this discrepancy.
Consistent with previous studies,11,33 male conscripts with maladaptation or psychiatric illness had lower ranks. In the Korean army, promotion to the upper ranks is allowed without serious disqualification. Male conscripts with adjustment problems or psychiatric disorders may not qualify for promotion.34 It is therefore natural that rank positively correlates with the duration of service in our study.
The maladjusted participants were found to have more pathological personality characteristics than control participants with the exception of NS. Measures of HA and ST were higher for the maladjusted group while RD, P, SD, and C scores were lower. These results are similar to those of previous research.16
The NS domain exhibited no significant difference between the groups. Both group had similar degree of behavioral activation in response of novelty and reward during military life with repetitive, regulated, and plain patterns whichever unit the male conscript was in. Accordingly, we assumed that they would have different responses to the identical stimuli in aspects of emotion, cognition and behavior, eventually these differences might be expressed as follows; the maladjustment group would attempt to leave military life, and the normal group would search for satisfaction within a given circumstance.
High HA scores reflect fearful, pessimistic, shy characteristics while low SD reflect blaming, aimless and self-defeating. Depression has been with correlated with high HA scores and Low SD scores in the previous studies.35-37 Unlike depression, it has been reported that low RD and C scores are specific to anxiety disorder.38,39 These findings has been suggested that male conscripts with maladjustment would have negative emotions such as depression and anxiety.
Low P scores reflect unstable, underachieving performance in the face of frustration. High ST scorers are highly likely to be associated with in schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and cluster A personality traits.10 Low C scores were the only predictor of increased risk of military maladjustment. This finding is in concordance with other studies finding that low C or SD scores are important predictors of the incidence of personality disorders, especially when the individual had a very low C score.16,40,41
C reflects the ability to collaborate, work with others, and accept and support them. In other words, a low C score means low sociality.10 Thus, deficient sociality seems to be the most essential psychopathology signaling poor suitability for the military life. Moreover, these results suggest that C may be a predictor of military adjustment and a useful screening tool for conscription.
All male conscripts can serve in the military after qualifying for the medical and psychological tests. Additionally, although great steps are taken at multiple levels to facilitate adaptation to military demands for several months before admission to a military service assessment unit, many nonetheless failed to adjust. Accordingly, we assumed that these maladjusted male conscripts have vulnerable, fixed personalities making them unsuitable for the military, personalities that are not otherwise detected under the current screening system.
Our study had several limitations. First, our preliminary study had the small sample size, which can lead to have low statistical power. This weakness may have biased the results in the logistic regression analysis because it's likely not to detect relatively weak association between TCI and military maladjustment. Second, the present study was a cross-sectional study not rendering causal inference impossible. These results should therefore be confirmed using cohort or prospective studies that are potentially more reliable. Third, the maladjusted male conscripts had different psychiatric diagnoses and would be in a wide range of mood state individually that had impact on the TCI. These heterogeneity between subjects made it difficult to interpret the our results of TCI. Fourth, the psychosocial factors such as developmental history in adolescence, coping skills to stress, social support system were not thoroughly investigated. It is important to evaluate these factors because they may have an effect on the susceptibility to military maladjustment.
Thus, the generalization of these results to other military populations may be limited. A follow-up or cohort study with a larger sample should be conducted in the future.
Despite these limitations, the present study was to our knowledge the first study to investigate the personality of severely maladjusted male conscripts in Korea. Our results suggest that the assessment of personality through the TCI can help identify maladaptive soldiers early on, thereby providing a useful complement to the current conscription screening system. Accordingly, we expect that such enhanced detection will contribute to the strengthening and reinforcement of morale in the Korean military.