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J. Occup. Environ. Med. · Jun 2012
Prevalence of environmental and other military exposure concerns in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom veterans.
- Karen S Quigley, Lisa M McAndrew, Liliana Almeida, Elizabeth A D'Andrea, Charles C Engel, Heather Hamtil, and Adam J Ackerman.
- Edith Nourse Rogers VA Memorial Hospital, Bedford, MA, USA. k.quigley@neu.edu
- J. Occup. Environ. Med. 2012 Jun 1;54(6):659-64.
ObjectiveThis study examined the prevalence of self-reported exposures in returning Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF)/Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) veterans and the relationship of exposure reports to current physical symptoms.MethodsUsing self-reports obtained immediately after return from deployment in a cohort of 760 enlisted Army reserve component military personnel, we assessed prevalence rates of environmental and other exposures and the association of these exposures to severity of physical symptoms.ResultsReporting of environmental exposures was relatively low in veterans of OEF/OIF, but reporting more environmental and other exposures, in particular screening positive for a traumatic brain injury, was related to greater physical symptom severity immediately after deployment.ConclusionsNon-treatment-seeking, enlisted Army reserve component personnel reported relatively few exposures immediately after return from deployment; however, more exposures was modestly associated with greater severity of physical symptoms when controlling for predeployment symptoms, gender, and other deployment-related exposures.
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