Health of US Veterans of 1991 Gulf War: A Follow Up Survey in 10 Years Print E-mail

 

 

J Occup Environ Med. 2009 Mar 24. [Epub ahead of print]

 

Health of US Veterans of 1991 Gulf War: A Follow-Up Survey in 10 Years.

 

Kang HK, Li B, Mahan CM, Eisen SA, Engel CC. From the Department of Veterans Affairs (Dr Kang, Dr Mahan), Environmental Epidemiology Service; Institute for Clinical Research Inc. (Ms Li), Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center of Washington DC; Department of Veterans Affairs (Dr Eisen), Health Services Research and Development Service; and Department of Defense (Dr Engel), Deployment Health Clinical Center at Walter Reed, Wash.

 

 

OBJECTIVE: To assess periodically the health status of a cohort of 1991 Gulf War veterans by comparing various health outcomes with those of their military peers who were not deployed to the Gulf.

 

METHODS: We conducted a follow-up health survey to collect health information among population-based samples of 30,000 veterans (15,000 Gulf War veterans and 15,000 Gulf Era veterans) using a structured questionnaire.

 

RESULTS: Gulf veterans reported significantly higher rates of unexplained multi-symptom illness, chronic fatigue syndrome-like illness, posttraumatic stress disorder, functional impairment, health care utilization, a majority of selected physical conditions and all mental disorders queried during the survey than did Gulf Era veteran controls.

 

CONCLUSIONS: Fourteen years after deployment, 1991 Gulf War veterans continue to report a higher prevalence of many adverse health outcomes, compared with Gulf Era veterans.

 

PMID: 19322107 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

 

 

 

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Last Updated on Monday, 30 March 2009 19:30
 

 

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