Military medicine
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Comparative Study
Serum lipids and lipoprotein profiles of military personnel and their families: Fort Polk Heart Smart Program.
Serum lipid and lipoprotein distributions and their correlates were examined in white, black, and Hispanic Army personnel and their families (N = 589) as part of the Fort Polk Heart Smart Program. In general, blacks tended to have higher HDL-C and lower triglycerides and VLDL-C than whites and Hispanics, whereas Hispanics tended to manifest higher triglycerides, VLDL-C, and LDL-C than whites. Unlike black and Hispanic men, white men tended to have lower HDL-C than white women. ⋯ A considerable proportion of individuals tended to manifest adverse lipoprotein patterns according to National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines for children and adults. Cigarette smoking and alcohol use were the major contributors to the variance of lipoproteins in men, whereas overweight and oral contraceptive use remained the major factors in this regard for women. These results indicate that early targeting of military personnel and their family members for primary prevention is highly desirable.
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Comparative Study
Fort Polk Heart Smart Program. Part IV: Lifestyles of military personnel and their families.
Lifestyles are major determinants in development of heart disease. Tobacco and alcohol use, physical activity, and hostility, a component of type A, were assessed in a sample of active military men and their wives at Fort Polk, Louisiana. ⋯ The implication of lifestyle descriptions is the need for intervention and health promotion, not only for military personnel, but also for their families. The significance of health promotion programs is the eventual reduction of health care costs and the well-being of families and fitness of military personnel.
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Dietary intake of military wives and factors that influence nutrition of military families were examined in 186 military wives--67% white, 18% black, 11% Hispanic, and 4% other. The ages ranged from 19 to 45 years (mean = 28.7 years). The observations show that 1.7 meals per day were shared by all family members. ⋯ Sodium intake averaged 3.2 g. Forty-five percent of the military wives did not meet two-thirds of the RDA for vitamins D, E, B-6, iron, folic acid, zinc, and magnesium. Less than 20% met two-thirds of the RDA for riboflavin, vitamin A, thiamin, iodine, selenium, and calcium.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)