Hoge Charles W, Lesikar Sandra E, Guevara Ramon, Lange Jeff, Brundage John F, Engel Charles C, Messer Stephen C, Orman David T
Department of Psychiatry, Deployment Health Clinic Center, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA.
Am J Psychiatry. 2002 Sep;159(9):1576-83. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.159.9.1576.
Epidemiological studies have shown that mental disorders are associated with reduced health-related quality of life, high levels of health care utilization, and work absenteeism. However, measurement of the burden of mental disorders by using population-based methods in large working populations, such as the U.S. military, has been limited.
Analysis of hospitalizations among all active-duty military personnel (16.4 million person-years) from 1990 to 1999 and ambulatory visits from 1996 to 1999 was conducted by using the Defense Medical Surveillance System. Rates of hospitalization, ambulatory visits, and attrition from military service were compared for persons with mental disorder diagnoses and those with diagnoses in 15 other ICD-9 disease categories.
Mental disorders was the leading category of discharge diagnoses among men and the second leading category among women; 13% of all hospitalizations and 23% of all inpatient bed days were attributed to mental disorders. Six percent of the military population received ambulatory services for mental disorders annually in 1998 and 1999. Among a 1-year cohort of personnel, 47% of those hospitalized for the first time for a mental disorder left military service within 6 months. This attrition rate was significantly different from the rate of only 12% after hospitalization for any of the 15 other disease categories (range=11%-18%) (relative risk=4.04, 95% confidence interval=3.91-4.17). The difference remained significant after controlling for effects of age, gender, and duration of service.
Mental disorders appear to represent the most important source of medical and occupational morbidity among active-duty U.S. military personnel. These findings provide new population-based evidence that mental disorders are common, disabling, and costly to society.
流行病学研究表明,精神障碍与健康相关生活质量下降、高医疗保健利用率和工作缺勤率有关。然而,在大型工作人群(如美国军队)中使用基于人群的方法来衡量精神障碍的负担一直很有限。
利用国防医疗监测系统,对1990年至1999年所有现役军人(1640万人年)的住院情况以及1996年至1999年的门诊就诊情况进行分析。比较了患有精神障碍诊断的人员与其他15种国际疾病分类第九版(ICD-9)疾病诊断的人员的住院率、门诊就诊率和军事服役人员流失率。
精神障碍是男性出院诊断的主要类别,是女性的第二大类别;所有住院病例的13%和所有住院床位日的23%归因于精神障碍。1998年和1999年,每年有6%的军人接受精神障碍门诊服务。在一组为期1年的人员中,首次因精神障碍住院的人员中有47%在6个月内离开军队。这一流失率与其他15种疾病类别中任何一种疾病住院后的流失率(范围为11%-18%)仅12%显著不同(相对风险=4.04,95%置信区间=3.91-4.17)。在控制了年龄、性别和服役时间的影响后,差异仍然显著。
精神障碍似乎是美国现役军人医疗和职业发病的最重要来源。这些发现提供了新的基于人群的证据,表明精神障碍很常见、会导致残疾且对社会成本高昂。