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Demographic, Physical, and Mental Health Factors Associated With Deployment of U.S. Army Soldiers to the Persian Gulf

机译:与将美军士兵部署到波斯湾有关的人口,身体和心理健康因素

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A total of 675,626 active duty Army soldiers who were known to be at risk for deployment to the Persian Gulf were followed from 1980 through the Persian Gulf War. Hospitalization histories for the entire cohort and Health Risk Appraisal surveys for a subset of 374 soldiers were used to evaluate prewar distress, health, and behaviors. Deployers were less likely to have had any prewar hospitalizations or hospitalization for a condition commonly reported among Gulf War veterans or to report experiences of depression/suicidal ideation. Deployers reported greater satisfaction with life and relationships but displayed greater tendencies toward risk taking, such as drunk driving, speeding, and failure to wear safety belts. Deployed veterans were more likely to receive hazardous duty pay and to be hospitalized for an injury than nondeployed Gulf War-era veterans. If distress is a predictor of postwar morbidity, it is likely attributable to experiences occurring during or after the war and not related to prewar exposures or health status. Postwar excess injury risk may be explained in part by a propensity for greater risk taking, which was evident before and persisted throughout the war.
机译:从1980年开始,随着波斯湾战争,共有675,626名现役军人被追踪部署到波斯湾。整个队列的住院历史和对374名士兵的子集进行的健康风险评估调查被用来评估战前的苦恼,健康状况和行为。部署者很少有战前住院或因海湾战争退伍军人中普遍报告的病症而住院或报告沮丧/自杀念头的经历。部署人员对生活和人际关系的满意度更高,但对冒险的倾向更强,例如酒后驾车,超速驾驶和不系安全带。与未部署的海湾战争时期的退伍军人相比,部署的退伍军人更有可能获得危险的工作报酬并受伤住院。如果苦恼是战后发病的预兆,则很可能归因于战争期间或战争后发生的经历,而与战前暴露或健康状况无关。战后过度受伤的风险可能部分由更大的冒险倾向来解释,这种倾向在战争之前就一直存在并在整个战争中持续存在。

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    《Military Medicine 》 |2010年第4期| p.227-237| 共11页
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    Nicole S. Bell, ScD, MPH*, LTC Paul J. Amoroso, MC USA[dagger], Jeffrey O. Williams, BS*, Michelle M. Yore, MSPH[double dagger], LTC Charles C. Engel, Jr., MC USA[double dagger], Laura Senier, BA*, Annette C. DeMattos, BS*, David H. Wegman, MD§* SSDS, Inc., Natick, MA.[dagger] U.S. Army Research Institute for Environmental Medicine, Natick, MA.[double dagger] Department of Psychiatry, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD and the Deployment Health Clinical Center, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC.§ Department of Work Environment, University of Massachusetts, Lowell, MA.The contents herein are the sole responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the position or the policy of the U.S. Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity, the U.S. Army, the Department of Defense, or the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. No official endorsement should be inferred.This manuscript was received for review in July 1999. The revised manuscript was accepted for publication in December 1999.Reprint & Copyright © by Association of Military Surgeons of U.S., 2000.This article originally appeared in Military Medicine 2000, 165(10): 762-72.,;

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