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Title: Assessing Health Outcomes After Environmental Exposures Associated With Open Pit Burning in Deployed US Service Members.

Authors: Rohrbeck, Patricia; Hu, Zheng; Mallon, Col Timothy M

Published In J Occup Environ Med, (2016 Aug)

Abstract: This study assessed the long-term health impact of environmental exposures associated with open pit burning in deployed US service members.Two hundred individuals deployed to Balad, Iraq, and Bagram, Afghanistan, with known exposure to open pits, were matched to 200 non-deployed service members. Both cohorts were observed for adverse health outcomes after returning from deployment.Slight increased risks were observed for respiratory diseases in the Bagram cohort (adj RR: 1.259), and for cardiovascular disease in the Balad cohort (adj RR: 1.072), but the findings were not significant. The combined deployed cohort showed lower risks for adverse health outcomes, suggesting a healthy deployer effect.In conclusion, this study did not find significantly increased risks for selected health outcomes after burn pit exposure during deployment among two deployed cohorts compared with a non-deployed cohort.

PubMed ID: 27501097 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: Afghanistan; Air Pollutants, Occupational/adverse effects*; Cardiovascular Diseases/epidemiology; Environmental Exposure/adverse effects*; Humans; Incineration; Iraq; Iraq War, 2003-2011; Military Personnel*; Occupational Exposure/adverse effects*; Respiratory Tract Diseases/epidemiology; Risk Factors

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