Health Conditions Among Navy Submariners at the End of Active Duty; A Retrospective Cohort Study.

Brian J Maguire, Linda M Hughes, Douglas C McAdams, Michael Gilbert, Robert Nordness
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Abstract

Introduction: Maintaining healthy, well-trained, and highly qualified armed forces is critical for ensuring military readiness. The purpose of this article is to contribute to the body of research focused on the health of U.S. Navy submariners and to identify the health conditions of U.S. Navy submariners during their final year of active duty service.

Materials and methods: In this retrospective cohort study, we examined medical records and personnel files of separating U.S. Navy sailors who were: (1) active duty between 2009 and 2018; (2) separated before 2019; and (3) were assigned to a submarine for at least 30 days. Both officers and enlisted service members were included. We linked, described, and analyzed data from the Defense Health Agency, Military Health System Data Repository (MDR), and the Bureau of Naval Personnel (BUPERS). International Classification of Diseases (ICD) diagnoses codes were obtained from MDR. Data collected from BUPERS include age, sex, and rank. We determined the number of individuals who had at least one diagnosed condition (identified as a three-digit ICD code). We report the number of diagnoses and calculate prevalence rates and confidence intervals per condition, as well as prevalence rates per year, using standard formulas. The study was approved by the Naval Submarine Medical Research Laboratory Institutional Review Board.

Results: During the study period, 26,014 submariners separated from the Navy. The average number of separations per year was 2,601. About a third of the separating submariners were in the 25 to 29 age group and over 50% were under 30 years of age. Of the three-digit individual ICD codes, some of the highest operationally relevant rates over the 10-year study period (2009-2018) were for joint disorders (prevalence rate [PR] = 180 per 1,000 submariners), back disorders (PR = 128), and sleep disorders (PR = 134). Three mental-health-related conditions were also among the 20 conditions with the highest rates.

Conclusions: High rates of specific diagnoses such as joint disorders indicate the need for additional study to examine causal relationships, to determine which conditions may contribute to lost work time, early separations, or low rates of reenlistment and which conditions might be a result of specific military occupations or duties. Study strengths are the large number of subjects and the long period of observations. A study weakness was the inability to identify submariners who separated because of health conditions. The overall impact of the study is that it identifies urgent health risks and establishes a way to prioritize future research. Future research should include a focus on medically separated personnel; compare rates for submariners to other military groups including all-Navy and all-Department of Defense; and determine specific and relative risks as a necessary precursor to developing, implementing, and testing risk reduction and health improvement interventions.

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美国海军退役潜艇艇员健康状况研究回顾性队列研究。
保持健康、训练有素和高素质的武装部队是确保军事准备的关键。这篇文章的目的是为美国海军潜艇艇员健康的研究机构做出贡献,并确定美国海军潜艇艇员在现役服务的最后一年的健康状况。材料与方法在这项回顾性队列研究中,我们检查了美国海军退役水手的医疗记录和人事档案,他们:(1)2009年至2018年现役;(2) 2019年前分居;(3)被分配到潜艇上至少30天。军官和士兵都包括在内。我们链接、描述并分析了来自国防卫生机构、军事卫生系统数据存储库(MDR)和海军人事局(BUPERS)的数据。国际疾病分类(ICD)诊断代码由多药耐药获得。从BUPERS收集的数据包括年龄、性别和级别。我们确定了至少有一种诊断病症(以三位数ICD代码标识)的个体数量。我们使用标准公式报告诊断的数量,并计算每种疾病的患病率和置信区间,以及每年的患病率。这项研究得到了海军潜艇医学研究实验室机构审查委员会的批准。结果在研究期间,26,014名潜艇兵脱离了海军。每年平均离职人数为2 601人。大约三分之一的分离潜艇艇员年龄在25至29岁之间,超过50%的艇员年龄在30岁以下。在三位数的个体ICD代码中,在10年研究期间(2009-2018年),与操作相关的最高发病率是关节疾病(患病率[PR] = 180 / 1000)、背部疾病(患病率= 128)和睡眠障碍(患病率= 134)。在20种疾病中,三种与精神健康相关的疾病也是发病率最高的。结论:关节疾病等特殊诊断的高比例表明需要进一步研究因果关系,以确定哪些情况可能导致失去工作时间、提前离职或低重新入伍率,哪些情况可能是特定军事职业或职责的结果。研究的优势在于研究对象多,观察时间长。研究的一个弱点是无法确定因健康状况而分离的潜艇兵。这项研究的总体影响是,它确定了紧急的健康风险,并确定了优先考虑未来研究的方法。未来的研究应包括对医学隔离人员的关注;将潜艇的费率与其他军事团体进行比较,包括全海军和全国防部;确定具体的和相对的风险,作为制定、实施和测试降低风险和改善健康干预措施的必要先导。
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