THE CONSTIPATED SERVICEMAN - PREVALENCE AMONG DEPLOYED UNITED-STATES TROOPS

Citation
Wb. Sweeney et al., THE CONSTIPATED SERVICEMAN - PREVALENCE AMONG DEPLOYED UNITED-STATES TROOPS, Military medicine, 158(8), 1993, pp. 546-548
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Medicine Miscellaneus
Journal title
ISSN journal
00264075
Volume
158
Issue
8
Year of publication
1993
Pages
546 - 548
Database
ISI
SICI code
0026-4075(1993)158:8<546:TCS-PA>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
The prevalence of constipation in deployed servicemen was determined i n a sample of military personnel aboard the USS Iwo Jima LPH 2 during Operation Desert Shield. Results were obtained from a bowel function q uestionnaire issued to 500 deployed marines and sailors. When constipa tion is defined as no bowel movement for greater than 3 days, 3.9% of the Marine/sailor personnel are constipated when in their home environ ment as compared to 6.0% when they are aboard ship and 30.2% while in the field. Alternatively, when constipation is defined as the presence of certain anorectal complaints (hard stools, straining, painful defe cation, and bleeding with defecation), the incidence is 7.2% when at h ome as compared to 10.4% aboard ship and 34.1% in the field. These res ults confirm that whether constipation is defined as infrequent bowel movements or presence of symptoms of constipation, significantly more servicemen will be constipated when in the field as compared to their home environment. Since approximately one-third of Navy/Marine Corps p ersonnel deployed in a field environment will be constipated, preventi ve measures ought to be evaluated.