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Article

Military deployment to the Gulf War as a risk factor for psychiatric illness among US troops

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Citation

Fiedler N, Ozakinci G, Hallman W, Wartenberg D, Brewer NT, Barrett DH & Kipen HM (2006) Military deployment to the Gulf War as a risk factor for psychiatric illness among US troops. British Journal of Psychiatry, 188 (5), pp. 453-459. https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33646524279&doi=10.1192%2fbjp.188.5.453&partnerID=40&md5=b57619d877780d485cee60596397b773; https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.188.5.453

Abstract
Background Several studies document an excess of psychiatric symptoms among veterans of the 1991 Gulf War. However, little is known about the prevalence of psychiatric disorders in those who were deployed to that conflict. Aims To compare the 12-month prevalence and associated risk factors for DSM Axis I psychiatric diagnoses between random samples of Gulf War-deployed veterans and veterans of the same era not deployed to the Persian Gulf (era veterans). Method Interview data from 967 Gulf War veterans and 784 era veterans were examined to determine current health status, medical conditions, symptoms and Axis I psychiatric disorders. Logistic regression models evaluated risk factors for psychiatric disorder. Results Gulf War veterans had a significantly higher prevalence of psychiatric diagnoses, with twice the prevalence of anxiety disorders and depression. Lower rank, female gender and divorced or single marital status were significant independent predictors of psychiatric disorder. Conclusions Deployment to the Gulf War is associated with a range of mental health outcomes more than 10 years after deployment.

Notes
cited By 44

Journal
British Journal of Psychiatry: Volume 188, Issue 5

StatusPublished
Publication date31/05/2006
Publication date online02/01/2018
Publisher URL
ISSN0007-1250
eISSN1472-1465

People (1)

Professor Gozde Ozakinci

Professor Gozde Ozakinci

Professor and Deputy Dean of Faculty, Psychology