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美国退伍军人中的吸烟、肥胖及其共病现象:来自国家健康和退伍军人适应力研究的结果。

Smoking, obesity, and their co-occurrence in the U.S. military veterans: results from the national health and resilience in veterans study.

机构信息

Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.; U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs New England Mental Illness Research and Education Clinical Center (MIRECC), Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, CT, USA..

Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.; Department of Neuroscience and Child Study Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.; Connecticut Council on Problem Gambling, Connecticut Council on Problem Gambling, Wethersfield, CT, USA.; Connecticut Mental Health Center, New Haven, CT, USA.

出版信息

J Affect Disord. 2020 Sep 1;274:354-362. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2020.04.005. Epub 2020 May 29.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Smoking and obesity are major public health concerns, though little is known about the mental and physical health burden of co-occurring obesity and smoking.

METHODS

Using a nationally representative sample of U.S. military veterans, we examined the prevalence of mental and physical co-morbidities, physical and mental functioning, and quality of life between obese only; smoking only; and obese smokers.

RESULTS

Among current smokers, 31.7% were obese; among obese veterans, 16.4% were current smokers; and in the total sample, 5.4% were obese and current smokers. Relative to the obese-only group, obese smokers were more likely to be younger, male, non-white, non-married, unemployed and VA-served, and have lower household incomes. These also reported higher levels of perceived stress and trauma and were more likely to endorsed current suicidal ideation and lifetime suicide attempts (odds ratio [OR]=2.0), medical (2.3<=OR<=3.9) and psychiatric (1.5<=OR<=2.9) comorbidities, and lower overall health status and quality of life. Compared to the smoking-only group, obese smokers were more likely to endorse current suicidal ideation (OR=2.0) and nicotine dependence (OR=1.5), and reported poorer physical health and overall quality of life. Analyses were adjusted for sociodemographic and military characteristics.

LIMITATIONS

The cross-sectional study design precludes causal inference.

CONCLUSIONS

These findings suggest that co-occurring obesity and smoking is associated with substantial mental and physical health burden in U.S. veterans. Collectively, they underscore the importance of multicomponent interventions targeting, obesity, smoking, and co-occurring issues, such as trauma and internalizing disorders, in this population.

摘要

背景

吸烟和肥胖是主要的公共卫生问题,尽管人们对肥胖和吸烟同时存在对身心健康的负担知之甚少。

方法

我们使用美国退伍军人的全国代表性样本,研究了精神和身体共病、身体和精神功能以及生活质量在单纯肥胖、单纯吸烟和肥胖吸烟者之间的差异。

结果

在当前吸烟者中,有 31.7%是肥胖者;在肥胖退伍军人中,有 16.4%是当前吸烟者;在总样本中,有 5.4%是肥胖且当前吸烟。与单纯肥胖组相比,肥胖吸烟者更年轻、男性、非裔、未婚、失业和曾在退伍军人事务部就诊,家庭收入较低。这些人也报告了更高的感知压力和创伤水平,更有可能报告当前的自杀意念和终身自杀企图(优势比[OR]=2.0),以及更多的医疗(2.3<=OR<=3.9)和精神(1.5<=OR<=2.9)合并症,以及整体健康状况和生活质量较低。与单纯吸烟组相比,肥胖吸烟者更有可能报告当前的自杀意念(OR=2.0)和尼古丁依赖(OR=1.5),并且报告身体状况较差和整体生活质量较差。分析调整了社会人口学和军事特征。

局限性

横断面研究设计排除了因果关系。

结论

这些发现表明,肥胖和吸烟同时存在与美国退伍军人的身心健康负担显著相关。总的来说,它们强调了针对肥胖、吸烟以及共病问题(如创伤和内化障碍)的多组分干预的重要性。

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