2001年至2019年期间部署到阿富汗的挪威退伍军人的死因特定死亡率。

Leif Åge Strand, Inger Rudvin, Einar Kristian Borud, Hans Jakob Bøe, Andreas Espetvedt Nordstrand, Elin Anita Fadum
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引用次数: 0

摘要

简介挪威军队参加了2001年开始的在阿富汗的“持久自由行动”军事行动。与普通人群相比,军事人员在降低全因死亡率方面往往表现出“健康士兵效应”。然而,在冲突地区服兵役会增加因运输事故和退伍后自杀等外部原因死亡的风险。我们旨在调查2001年至2019年间部署到阿富汗的9192名挪威退伍军人(7.5%为女性)的病因特异性死亡率。材料和方法我们从队列成员在阿富汗服役的第一天到2019年对他们进行了跟踪调查。通过比较我们队列中观察到的死亡人数与普通人群中的预期死亡人数,我们计算了95%置信区间的标准化死亡率(SMR)。在整个随访期间,分别计算了男性和女性的标准化死亡率,仅计算了两个时间段的男性死亡率:在阿富汗部署期间和退役后。我们观察到77人死亡(3名女性和74名男性),其中10人发生在部署期间(战争伤亡,1名女性和9名男性);其他均发生在出院后。妇女的全因死亡率与普通人群没有差异(SMR = 0.52,95%CI 0.11-1.53)。对于男性,观察到的全因死亡率低于整个随访期的预期死亡率(SMR = 0.55,95%CI 0.43-0.69),而出院后因运输事故死亡(13例)是预期死亡率的两倍多(SMR = 2.36,95%CI 1.26-4.04)。观察到的11名自杀者的自杀风险比预期的自杀率低(SMR = 0.66,95%CI 0.33-1.18)。结论根据“健康士兵效应”,在阿富汗服役通常与部署期间和退伍后的死亡风险低于预期有关。出院后死于交通事故的风险高于预期,而观察到的自杀发生率与普通人群的预期发生率没有差异。
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Cause-Specific Mortality Among Norwegian Veterans Deployed to Afghanistan Between 2001 and 2019.

Introduction: Norwegian military forces participated in the military campaign Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan starting in 2001. Military personnel often show a "healthy soldier effect" in terms of lowered all-cause mortality when compared to the general population. However, military service in conflict areas is associated with an increased risk of death from external causes such as transport accidents and suicide after discharge. We aimed to investigate cause-specific mortality in a cohort of 9,192 Norwegian (7.5% women) veterans deployed to Afghanistan between 2001 and 2019.

Materials and methods: We followed cohort members from their first day of service in Afghanistan through 2019. We computed standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) with 95% CIs by comparing the observed number of deaths in our cohort with the expected number of deaths in the general population. Standardized mortality ratios were calculated for the full follow-up period among men and women separately, and among men only for two time periods: during deployment and after discharge from service in Afghanistan.

Results: We observed 77 deaths (3 women and 74 men), 10 of which occurred during deployment (war casualties, 1 woman and 9 men); all others occurred after discharge. All-cause mortality in women did not differ from that in the general population (SMR = 0.52, 95% CI 0.11-1.53). For men, the observed all-cause mortality was lower than the expected rate for the full follow-up period (SMR = 0.55, 95% CI 0.43-0.69), during deployment, and after discharge, while deaths because of transport accidents after discharge (13 cases) were more than twice as high as expected rates (SMR = 2.36, 95% CI 1.26-4.04). The 11 observed suicides gave a nonstatistically significant, lower suicide risk compared to the expected rates (SMR = 0.66, 95% CI 0.33-1.18).

Conclusion: In accordance with the "healthy soldier effect," military service in Afghanistan was generally associated with a lower than expected risk of death both during deployment and after discharge. The risk of death from transport accidents was higher than expected after discharge, while the observed incidence of suicide did not differ from the expected rate in the general population.

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