RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Using statistical techniques to understand the unique needs of military personnel experiencing mental health difficulties: moving away from assuming patient homogeneity to understanding heterogeneity JF BMJ Military Health JO BMJ Mil Health FD British Medical Journal Publishing Group SP 402 OP 405 DO 10.1136/military-2022-002253 VO 170 IS 5 A1 Hendrikx, Laura Josephine A1 Murphy, D YR 2024 UL http://militaryhealth.bmj.com/content/170/5/402.abstract AB Gold standard treatments for military personnel seeking support for mental health difficulties are often standardised and manualised to ensure high levels of treatment fidelity. While manualised treatments are preferable to less evidence-based idiosyncratic approaches, they may not fully account for the differences in symptom profiles present in patients with the same psychological diagnosis. Indeed, recent findings have highlighted that a significant proportion of individuals do not benefit from the ‘gold standard’ treatments. This brief report discusses the utility of statistical techniques, specifically latent profile analysis and network analysis, to support the transition to more evidence-based idiosyncratic, personalised care for clinical military, and general, populations. Further incorporation of such analysis methods may support arriving at a framework to support the personalisation of care in terms of the selection and adaption of evidence-based approach treatments based on individual clinical need.