Medindia LOGIN REGISTER
Medindia

Asthma, Smoking, Weight Upped by War Trauma

by Trilok Kapur on Mar 17 2010 11:02 AM

A study claims that the risk of developing asthma increases if a person lives through the trauma of war.

Published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, the study found that those who are most traumatized are twice as likely to develop the condition as those who are least traumatized by their experiences of war.

The authors base their findings on a random sample of just over 2000 Kuwaiti civilians who endured the Iraqi invasion and seven month occupation of their country in 1990, and were aged between 50 and 69 at the time.

Between 2003 and 2005, these civilians were quizzed about their health, including a diagnosis of asthma after liberation; experiences of the war; and lifestyle factors, such as smoking and weight.

The researchers acknowledge that assessing the impact of war related trauma is difficult, because some of the stressors may be unique to a particular situation and the circumstances can be complex. So they used a validated questionnaire (Harvard Trauma Questionnaire), supplemented with face to face interviews to capture individual experiences.

Around one in six men and one in five women did not experience trauma during the war. But two thirds of the men and over half of the women feared for their lives.

Among the 413 participants with a low war related stress (Rasch) score, only one reported having been assaulted; three said they had been arrested; and 28 had had their house searched. None had witnessed torture, rape, or executions.

Advertisement
But among the 517 with a high stress score, around one in 10 had been arrested; one in six had been assaulted; and more than half had witnessed torture. New cases of asthma after liberation had been diagnosed in 6.6 percent of the men and just under one in 10of the women.

There was a direct correlation between the amount of trauma experienced and the risk of developing asthma, even after adjusting for factors likely to influence the results, including exposure to air pollution as a result of burning oil fires.

Advertisement
Those who had experienced the most trauma were twice as likely to develop asthma as those who had been the least traumatized.

Source-ANI
TRI


Advertisement