Title: SUBSCREEN Program:
1 SUBSCREEN Program Psychological Screening of
Prospective Submariners James C.
Whanger SUBSCREEN Director Naval Submarine
Medical Research Laboratory
Financial Sponsors CNO-N779, ONR, BUMED
Collaborators CAPT D. Southerland, Dr. W. Horn,
Ms. Alison America, Jerry Lamb, Ph.D. and Mark
Bing, Ph.D.
2Psychological Demands of Submarine Environment
- Socially Intense
- No escape from workplace conflict
- No personal space
- Little to no contact with significant others
- Cognitively Demanding
- Submarine jobs require focused attention
- They tend to be complex
- Long hours
- Sleep Deprivation
3History of Psychological Screening in the U.S.
Navy Submarine Force
- 1920s - group interviews of prospective
submariners (McGuire, 1990) - 1940s - screening battery Shock Fusion Time Test,
the New London NDRC Confidential Questionnaire,
the NRC Neurotic Inventory, and the Personal
Inventory (NDRC Project 44, Div. 7, 1943)
4History (cont.)
- 1950s 60s The Personal Inventory Barometer
(PIB) was developed and utilized for 25 years to
assess anxiety, attitudes towards submarine duty,
motivation, suicide ideation, and depression
(Weybrew Noddin, 1969) - SUBSCREEN was developed during the 1970s and
80s by Kendall Bryant from an effort to update
the psychological screening program for the
submarine force and was implemented as a means to
refer prospective submariners for clinical
psychological interviews in 1986 (Schlichting,
1993)
5SUBSCREEN Test
- 240-item self-report questionnaire implemented in
1986 - Factors into 6 Dimensions
- Vulnerability
- Anti-Military
- Depression-Suicide
- Efficacy
- Anti-Social
- Social Isolation
- Database norms for
- 30,000 enlisted
- 4,400 officers
6Current Utilization
- With the current SUBSCREEN program 3 of
submarine duty candidates are eliminated for - Personality Disorders
- Suicidal Ideation
- Depression
- Problems with Nuclear Duties
- High probability of adverse attrition for
misconduct, substance abuse, psychological
dysfunction, etc. (i.e., from SMART) - Among other reasons (e.g., unreliability)
7Rate of Psychological Problems (Waiver/Disqual/Exp
editious ADSEP) in SUBPAC
8Results of SUBSCREEN Referral System
76 ATTRITE
20 ATTRITE
- Conclusion Current system removes approximately
3 of BESS students from the submarine training
pipeline.
9SUBSCREEN Referral Rates Across Time
Referred
10Overlap Between PRP SUBSCREEN
- DoD 5210.42-R SUBSCREEN Scales
- Attitude to Nuclear Duty Problems with Nuclear
Duties - Impulsiveness Impulsivity
- Suicide Attempt/Threats Suicidal Ideation
- Destructiveness Aggressive-Destructive
- Social Adjustment Social Isolation, Lack of
Social Support - Sadness Depression
- Dependability Problems Home/School
- Emotional Stability Low Situational Control,
Anxiety - Poor Attitude Coercive Attitudes
- Lack of Motivation Mistake Joining Sub Service
- Conclusion SUBSCREENs content validity is high,
and it effectively identifies unreliable
submarine duty candidates.
11SUBSCREEN Process
NAVSUBSCOL (NSMRL administers SUBSCREEN)
NSMRL scores the answer sheets generates
SUBSCREEN profiles
1. Qualified Return to BESS 2. Unqualified SF
Transfer 3. Unqualified ADSEP
12Ongoing Studies
- SMART Intervention Study
- Phase 1
- BESS MTIs are provided with a list of
prospective submariners who flag on the SMART
test - Phase 2
- Counseling resources on the Sub Base are
communicated and phone numbers and locations are
given to participants - Depression-Malingering
- NAVSCREEN
- Revised SUBSCREEN is being evaluated for use
early in the pipeline - Test Administration was conducted at RTC
13Development of SubMarine Attrition Risk Test
(SMART)
- Built a database of several thousand successful
and unsuccessful Submariners who had taken
SUBSCREEN when at BESS - Successful
- Unsuccessful
14SMART Methodology
- Discriminant analysis produced a subset of
SUBSCREEN scales that accurately categorized
these groups, and this subset was termed the
SubMarine Attrition Risk Test, or SMART - Cross-validations (i.e., scientific replications)
of SMART predicting attrition in training and
fleet have been very successful
15SMART prediction capability for Enlisted
Attrition
Attrition
Count
Early attrition highly likely
Reenlisted
400
Attrited
Bars show counts numbers of sailors in database
300
Results shown validated via five replications
with specific groups.
200
100
-5.00
0.00
5.00
SMART Scores
Outcome SMART accurately predicts career success
career attrition rates for enlisted non-nuclear
submariners
15
16SUBFOR ROI
- Schoolhouse
- Early referrals for psychological interview
- Avoids future behavior problems by generating
referral - Removal from pipeline early in process if totally
unsuitable - SMART allows for finer tuning
- Targeted interventions (assuming trends
continue) - Lowers schoolhouse attrition and punishment rate
- Fleet
- Fewer negative issues shipboard
- Fewer medical evacuations
- Lower attrition
- Financial Benefit Cost of 1st term attritions
- 18.5 x 36 x 200K x 2,500 33.3 Million
Dollars - Assume SMART reduces attrition by 1/10th
- 18.5 x 32.4 x 200K x 2,500 29.97 Million
Dollars - 33.3 Million - 29.97 Million 3.33 Million in
Annual Savings
16
17NAVSCREEN Validation Study
- Collected Data on revised SUBSCREEN test Oct.
2005 Jan. 2006 - Tracked through RTC
- Currently Tracking through A School
18NAVSCREEN Sample - Disqualifications
19(No Transcript)
20(No Transcript)
21(No Transcript)
22Next Steps NAVSCREEN
- Measurement Equivalence/Invariance
- Submarine Force and Surface
- Male and Female
- Majority Group and Minority Groups
- Track through the end of A School and Into the
Fleet - Psychological Attrition
- Legal Misconduct
23Future Research
- Shorten Length of Current Test
- Computerize - IRT
- Incorporate Measures of Temperament
- Incorporate Measures of Defensive Styles
- Incorporate Measures of Conditional Reasoning
24 QUESTIONS?
25Navy Mandate for Psychological Screening of
Prospective Submariners
- MANMED Article 15-69 para 2(i) Because of the
nature of the submarine duties, the
psychological fitness of applicants for submarine
training must be carefully appraised.
26SUBFOR ROI Prediction Based Decisions
Current use of SUBSCREEN SMART saves dollars
and labor
Outcomes Current Savings 5M/yr for annual
Implementation/carrying Cost of about 1/4M
26
27- Measurement Equivalence/Invariance strategy?
(Vandenberg Lance, 2000 Vandenberg, 2002) - Equality of covariance matrices across groups
- Configural Invariance same pattern of fixed
and free factor loadings is specified for each
group - Metric Invariance factor loadings for like
items are invariant across groups - Scalar Invariance intercepts of like items
regressions on the latent variables are invariant
across groups - Like items unique variances are invariant
across groups - Factor variances are invariant across groups
- Factor covariances were invariant across groups
- Factor means invariant across groups
28Personnel Reliability Program the SUBSCREEN
Test
- PRP
- Position Qualification
- Medical Exam
- Security Clearance
- Personal Interview
- DoD 5210.42-R
- C2.2.1. Criteria
- dependability and emotional stability
- good social adjustment
- positive attitude toward nuclear weapon duty
- C2.3.7. Poor Attitude or Lack of Motivation
- impulsiveness and destructiveness
- sadness and agitation
- C2.3.8. Suicide Attempt and/or Threats
29Rationale of SMART TE Problem
- 1st Term Attritions
- 18.5 fail to complete 1st tour (VADM
Grossenbacher, 2003) - 36 are psychologically-based (CAPT Gudewicz,
2004) - 200K is cost per Submariner upon completing
A-School (CAPT Lotring, 2004) - 18.5 x 36 x 200K x 2,500 (BESS Students Per
Year) - 33.3 Million Lost Annually
- Psychologically-based MEDEVACS
- 13 during a 10-month period in 2002 in SUBLANT
alone - 3 halted operations
- MEDEVACS can result in detection, mission failure
- Estimated Cost 3.9 million, or 300K per day
per event
Problems