Díaz Santana Mary Vanellys, Eber Stephanie, Barth Shannon, Cypel Yasmin, Dursa Erin, Schneiderman Aaron
Department of Public Health, University of Massachusetts, 412 Arnold House, 715 North Pleasant Street, Amherst, MA 01003.
Post-Deployment Health Epidemiology Program, Office of Patient Care Services, Department of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue NW (10P4Q), Washington, DC 20420.
Mil Med. 2017 Nov;182(11):e1885-e1891. doi: 10.7205/MILMED-D-17-00020.
Recent studies have demonstrated health problems among veterans of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq (Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom). Veterans from these conflicts have a higher prevalence of mental disorders and physical diseases, though most studies were conducted using administrative data.
This study analyzes data from the National Health Study for a New Generation of U.S. Veterans, a population-based survey that collected data on Operation Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom veterans between 2009 and 2011. Weighted prevalence estimates of deployed and nondeployed veterans were calculated for SF-12 general health perception and clinic and hospital visits. Weighted mean physical (PCS) and mental component summary (MCS) scores were calculated by demographic and military characteristics. Weighted, adjusted odds ratios (aORs), 95% confidence intervals (95% CI), and prevalence estimates were calculated for physician-diagnosed medical conditions comparing deployed to nondeployed veterans.
Of 60,000 veterans sampled, 20,563 responded to the survey (response rate = 34%). Deployed veterans had increased odds for significant hearing loss (aOR = 1.48; 95% CI = 1.35, 1.63), and lower odds for arthritis (aOR = 0.90; 95% CI = 0.83, 0.98), diabetes (aOR = 0.70; 95% CI = 0.58, 0.84), and migraines (aOR = 0.88; 95% CI = 0.80, 0.97) compared to nondeployed veterans. The prevalence of clinic visits was nearly equal between deployed and nondeployed veterans, though nondeployed veterans reported a higher percentage of hospitalizations that were overnight or longer. The SF-12 MCS was higher among the nondeployed group compared to the deployed group (p < 0.0001), though the deployed group reported a higher PCS compared to the nondeployed (p < 0.0001). The SF-12 MCS and PCS were lower than the U.S. population mean of 50.
Deployed veterans are at increased risk for some health conditions; however, nondeployed veterans also report a variety of health conditions. Addressing the unique health concerns of both deployed and nondeployed veterans is important and continued observation of all veterans is recommended.
最近的研究表明,阿富汗和伊拉克战争(持久自由行动和伊拉克自由行动)的退伍军人存在健康问题。这些冲突中的退伍军人患精神障碍和身体疾病的比例更高,不过大多数研究是使用行政数据进行的。
本研究分析了美国新一代退伍军人全国健康研究的数据,这是一项基于人群的调查,收集了2009年至2011年期间持久自由行动/伊拉克自由行动退伍军人的数据。计算了部署和未部署退伍军人在SF-12总体健康感知以及门诊和住院就诊方面的加权患病率估计值。根据人口统计学和军事特征计算了加权平均身体(PCS)和精神成分总结(MCS)得分。计算了比较部署和未部署退伍军人的医生诊断医疗状况的加权调整比值比(aOR)、95%置信区间(95%CI)和患病率估计值。
在抽样的60000名退伍军人中,20563人对调查做出了回应(回应率 = 34%)。与未部署的退伍军人相比,部署的退伍军人患严重听力损失的几率增加(aOR = 1.48;95%CI = 1.35,1.63),患关节炎(aOR = 0.90;95%CI = 0.83,0.98)、糖尿病(aOR = 0.70;95%CI = 0.58,0.84)和偏头痛(aOR = 0.88;95%CI = 0.80,0.97)的几率较低。部署和未部署的退伍军人门诊就诊率几乎相等,不过未部署的退伍军人报告的过夜或更长时间住院的比例更高。与部署组相比,未部署组的SF-12 MCS更高(p < 0.0001),不过与未部署组相比,部署组报告的PCS更高(p < 0.0001)。SF-12 MCS和PCS低于美国人口平均值50。
部署的退伍军人患某些健康状况的风险增加;然而,未部署的退伍军人也报告了各种健康状况。关注部署和未部署退伍军人独特的健康问题很重要,建议持续观察所有退伍军人。