Guest guest Posted April 17, 2001 Report Share Posted April 17, 2001 This is particularly distressing to me, as my firstborn son just got Army directed orders to Korea, which includes the requirement to get the Anthrax vaccination.....it was the one thing I feared most. Patty From: " Ilena Rose " <ilena@...> Sent: Monday, April 16, 2001 12:37 PM Subject: Health of UK Gulf War Veterans Substantially Poorer Than That of Controls ~~~ thanks Margo ~~~ http://neurology.medscape.com/reuters/prof/2001/04/04.13/20010412epid009.htm l Health of UK Gulf War Veterans Substantially Poorer Than That of Controls ------------------------------------------------------------------------ WESTPORT, CT (Reuters Health) Apr 12 - UK veterans of the Gulf war report significantly poorer health compared with controls, and a substantial number report symptoms that may be associated with inoculations and pesticide exposure, according to two reports by the same research group in the May issue of Occupational and Environmental Medicine. Using information from the Ministry of Defence, Dr. Nicola Cherry, from the University of Manchester, and colleagues collected data on 14,378 men and women, including 4795 in a main cohort and 4793 in a validation cohort of individuals who were sent to the Gulf, and a control cohort of 4790 individuals not sent to the Gulf. Seven years after the war, the researchers asked participants to complete a questionnaire about their health in the last month. The combined mean symptom severity score among those who had been to the Gulf was 3.0 compared with 1.7 among controls. Cluster analysis showed that psychological, peripheral, respiratory, gastrointestinal and concentration symptoms were significantly worse among those who had been to the Gulf. Symptoms suggestive of neuropathy were reported by 12.5% of the Gulf war veterans compared with 6.8% of the non-Gulf war group. Furthermore, 12.2% of the Gulf war veterans reported widespread pain compared with 6.5% among controls, Dr. Cherry's group found. In the second part of their study, the researchers tried to uncover the relationship between exposure to environmental conditions and pain or peripheral neuropathy. Using a separate questionnaire, they collected data on exposure to various environmental agents among 7971 individuals who had been to the Gulf. The length of exposure to smoke from burning oil wells, the number of inoculations given in preparation for or during deployment, and the length of time handling pesticides were positively although weakly associated with the severity of symptoms, the investigators found. The number of inoculations was positively linked with musculoskeletal complaints, and symptoms of toxic neuropathy were associated with the number of days spent handling pesticides. " The Gulf war reminded us all that health problems after conflicts still occur despite decreasing combat and increasing peacekeeping activities of modern military forces, " Dr. Khalida Ismail, from Guy's, King's and St. 's Hospital in London, writes in a journal editorial. " From an occupational health perspective, strategies to prevent or reduce health problems after conflict need to be developed ã such as routine surveillance, risk communication, and keeping systematic medical records, " Dr. Ismail stresses. Occup Environ Med 2001;58:289-306. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.