美国退伍军人的呼吸健康状况

Rand health quarterly Pub Date : 2024-12-10 eCollection Date: 2024-12-01
Robert Bozick, Roland Neil
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引用次数: 0

摘要

许多退伍军人及其支持者担心,服兵役可能会因职业接触环境危害(如越南战争中的橙剂、全球反恐战争中的烧伤坑)或传染病(如肺炎)而导致呼吸功能受损。这种暴露发生在服役人员的青年时期,可能不会对肺部健康产生立即可见的影响;一些症状可能会在离开军队后的几个月或几年内出现,而可诊断的疾病可能要到几十年后才会出现。为退伍军人提供服务的医疗保健提供者必须考虑退伍军人服役期间的独特战斗环境和服兵役可能导致的健康状况的年龄分级性质。为了描述广泛年龄范围内退伍军人的肺部健康状况,作者分析了两项具有全国代表性的健康和福祉调查的数据,其中包括退伍军人及其平民同龄人的样本。根据这些数据,作者比较了在不同的国家冲突时期(朝鲜战争、越南战争、沙漠盾牌/风暴行动和全球反恐战争)中观察到的退伍军人和适龄服兵役的平民的呼吸健康结果。作者估计,吸烟行为的差异——包括入伍前的差异——至少占退伍军人与平民呼吸结果差异的一半。这表明需要在军队和过渡期后努力戒烟,并进一步研究可能导致这些退伍军人和平民差异的其他因素,如服兵役期间的环境暴露。
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Respiratory Health Among U.S. Veterans Across Age and Over Time.

Many veterans and their advocates are concerned that military service may cause impaired respiratory function resulting from occupational exposures to environmental hazards (e.g., Agent Orange in the Vietnam War, burn pits in the Global War on Terror) or infectious diseases (e.g., pneumonia). Such exposures occurring in service members' young adulthoods may not have immediately discernible effects on lung health; some symptoms may emerge in the immediate months or years after separation from the military, and diagnosable conditions may not manifest until decades later. Health care providers serving veteran populations must consider both the unique combat circumstances surrounding the time of veterans' service and the age-graded nature of health conditions that might result from military service. To characterize lung health across a broad age range of veterans, the authors analyzed data from two nationally representative surveys of health and well-being that include samples of veterans and their civilian peers. With these data, the authors compared respiratory health outcomes observed for the veteran and civilian populations who were of prime age for military service during different periods of national conflict: the Korean War, the Vietnam War, Operation Desert Shield/Storm, and the Global War on Terror. The authors estimated that differences in smoking behaviors-including differences prior to enlistment-account for at least half of the veteran-civilian disparities in respiratory outcomes. This suggests the need for military-based and post-transition smoking cessation efforts and further research into other factors that might contribute to these veteran and civilian disparities, such as environmental exposures during military service.

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