Ciminera Paul, Brundage John
Army Medical Surveillance Activity, U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, Washington, District of Columbia 20307-5001, USA.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2007 Feb;76(2):275-9.
U.S. service members are often deployed to regions endemic for malaria. Preventive measures play an important role in mitigating the risk of disease and adverse effects on mission performance. Currently, a large contingent of U.S. forces is deployed in malarious regions in southeast and southwest Asia. The purpose of this study was to describe malaria cases reported by the tri-service reportable medical events system in terms of exposure (deployment history) and latency of infection. We conducted a retrospective analysis of population health data routinely collected for disease surveillance. All malaria reports received into the Defense Medical Surveillance System by January 3, 2006 with a date of onset between January 1, 2000 and December 31, 2005 in which the individual diagnosed is a member of the active or reserve military components linked to personnel and deployment data were analyzed to determine assignment and deployment history. The main outcome measure was the ICD9-CM diagnosis of malaria (Plasmodium vivax, P. falciparum, P. ovale, P. malaria, and unspecified malaria) by date of onset and days from exposure. A total of 423 cases of malaria were reported during the study period. The Army (n = 325) and the Marine Corps (n = 46) had the highest number of reported cases. Plasmodium vivax (n = 242) and P. falciparum (n = 92) caused nearly four-fifths of all reported cases. During the period from 2003 through 2005, 34% of deployed cases were exposed to more than one malaria-endemic region. Seventy-four cases had been assigned in the Republic of Korea, and all were present in Korea during the high risk transmission period. Seventy-eight cases had documented service in Afghanistan; only 4 had off-season exposure and no other documented exposures. Sixty cases had documented exposure during Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF). Only six seasonally exposed and six off seasonally exposed OIF cases had no other documented exposure. Fifty percent of Korean cases were diagnosed during an exposure season, and only 3% of Afghan cases were diagnosed during an exposure season. Soldiers in today's military can be exposed to more than one malaria-endemic region prior to diagnosis. This presents new complexities for disease monitoring and prevention policy development.
美国军人经常被部署到疟疾流行地区。预防措施在降低疾病风险和减轻对任务执行的不利影响方面发挥着重要作用。目前,大批美军部署在东南亚和西南亚的疟疾流行地区。本研究的目的是根据暴露情况(部署历史)和感染潜伏期描述三军可报告医疗事件系统报告的疟疾病例。我们对为疾病监测常规收集的人群健康数据进行了回顾性分析。分析了截至2006年1月3日录入国防医疗监测系统的所有疟疾病例报告,这些病例的发病日期在2000年1月1日至2005年12月31日之间,且被诊断个体为现役或预备役军事人员,并与人员和部署数据相关联,以确定任务分配和部署历史。主要结局指标是按发病日期和暴露天数对疟疾(间日疟原虫、恶性疟原虫、卵形疟原虫、三日疟原虫和未指定的疟疾)进行国际疾病分类第九版临床修订本(ICD9-CM)诊断。在研究期间共报告了423例疟疾病例。陆军(n = 325)和海军陆战队(n = 46)报告的病例数最多。间日疟原虫(n = 242)和恶性疟原虫(n = 92)导致了近五分之四的报告病例。在2003年至2005年期间,34%的已部署病例暴露于不止一个疟疾流行地区。74例曾被派往韩国,且在高风险传播期都在韩国。78例有在阿富汗服役的记录;只有4例在非传播季节暴露且无其他记录在案的暴露情况。60例有在伊拉克自由行动(OIF)期间暴露的记录。在OIF中,只有6例季节性暴露和6例非季节性暴露的病例无其他记录在案的暴露情况。50%的韩国病例在暴露季节被诊断出来,而阿富汗病例只有3%在暴露季节被诊断出来。当今军队中的士兵在被诊断之前可能会暴露于不止一个疟疾流行地区。这给疾病监测和预防政策制定带来了新的复杂性。