Health conditions seen frequently in hospitalized United States Veterans who served after 9/11/2001: A scoping review.

Joel C Boggan, Nazima Allaudeen, Heather Shaw, Sarah Cantrell, Joyce Akwe
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Abstract

Background: Hospitalists working outside the Veterans Affairs (VA) system frequently will serve Veterans receiving care for acute conditions and/or awaiting transfer to VA facilities.

Objective: To perform a scoping review of health conditions and associated outcomes relevant to hospital medicine in US Veterans who served in active duty or reserve deployed roles after November 9, 2001.

Methods: A search of MEDLINE and Embase was performed using a combination of terms related to military service period and health conditions, yielding 5634 citations published after January 1, 2013.

Study selection and data extraction: Two reviewers performed independent screening at the title/abstract and later at the full-text levels. Conflicts at both stages were resolved through discussion. Single reviewers extracted data and synthesized results into three categories: (1) mental health and nonblast trauma, (2) neurologic outcomes, and (3) other conditions, including cardiovascular and respiratory outcomes.

Results: Of 85 included studies, 19 focused on cardiovascular, respiratory, autoimmune, and multisystem outcomes; 38 focused on mental health and nonblast trauma; and 28 focused on traumatic brain injury and neurologic outcomes. Studies showed high rates of comorbid mental health diagnoses and suicide-related behaviors relative to non-Veteran populations, as well as relatively younger incidence of cardiovascular and respiratory chronic conditions, such as atrial fibrillation.

Conclusions: Most studied health conditions among Veterans of post-9/11 conflicts have focused on areas of particular importance to the VA. However, significant gaps remain, particularly in understanding the correlation between specific exposures and clinical outcomes currently observed and to be anticipated in the future in this population.

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2001年9月11日之后服役的住院美国退伍军人常见的健康状况:范围审查。
背景:在退伍军人事务(VA)系统之外工作的医院医生经常会为接受急症护理和/或等待转移到VA设施的退伍军人提供服务。目的:对2001年11月9日后服役于现役或预备役的美国退伍军人的健康状况和与医院医疗相关的相关结果进行范围审查。方法:对MEDLINE和Embase进行检索,使用与兵役期和健康状况相关的术语组合进行检索,获得2013年1月1日以后发表的5634条引文。研究选择和数据提取:两位审稿人分别在标题/摘要和全文层面进行独立筛选。两个阶段的矛盾都是通过讨论解决的。单一审稿人提取数据并将结果合成为三类:(1)精神健康和非爆炸创伤,(2)神经系统结果,(3)其他情况,包括心血管和呼吸系统结果。结果:85项纳入的研究中,19项关注心血管、呼吸、自身免疫和多系统结局;38个重点关注心理健康和非爆炸创伤;28人专注于创伤性脑损伤和神经系统预后。研究表明,与非退伍军人人群相比,共病精神健康诊断和自杀相关行为的发生率较高,心血管和呼吸系统慢性病(如心房颤动)的发病率也相对较低。结论:对9/11冲突后退伍军人健康状况的大多数研究都集中在对VA特别重要的领域。然而,仍然存在重大差距,特别是在了解特定暴露与目前观察到的临床结果之间的相关性以及未来对该人群的预期。
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