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Journal Article

Citation

Bith-Melander P, Ratliff J, Poisson C, Jindal C, Ming Choi Y, Efird JT. Ann. Psychiatry Clin. Neurosci. 2021; 4(1): e1042.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Remedy Publications)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

35128459

PMCID

PMC8816568

Abstract

During deployment to the Persian Gulf War and Southwest Asia theatre of operations, Veterans often experienced various hazards, foremost being open-air burn pits and oil well fires. While over 23 presumptive conditions (ranging from brain cancer, interstitial lung disease, and lymphomas to sleep/mood disorders, depression, and cognitive impairment) have been studied in connection with their military-related exposures, there is a paucity of qualitative research on this topic. This is especially true in the context of explanatory models and health belief systems, vis-à-vis underlying social and cultural factors. The current paper provides a balanced conceptual framework (summarizing causal virtues and shortcomings) about the challenges that Veterans encounter when seeking medical care, screening assessments and subsequent treatments.


Language: en

Keywords

Qualitative analysis; Burn pits; Deployment anthropology; Explanatory models; Military exposures; Oil well fires

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