2015
DOI: 10.1007/s11999-015-4180-6
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Disability After Deployment Injury: Are Women and Men Service Members Different?

Abstract: Background Civilian trauma literature suggests sexual dimorphism in outcomes after trauma. Because women represent an increasing demographic among veterans, the question remains if war trauma outcomes, like civilian trauma outcomes, differ between genders. Questions/purposes (1) Do women service members develop different conditions resulting in long-term disability compared with men service members after injuries sustained during deployment? (2) Do women service members have more or less severe disability afte… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…Despite 17 years of continued progress, the long-term effects of these severe battlefield injuries remain apparent [6]. Regardless of the injury, the recovery process can be a challenge and partnering with our colleagues in physical The authors certify that neither they, nor any members of their immediate families, have any commercial associations (such as consultancies, stock ownership, equity interest, patent/licensing arrangements, etc.)…”
Section: "Imentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite 17 years of continued progress, the long-term effects of these severe battlefield injuries remain apparent [6]. Regardless of the injury, the recovery process can be a challenge and partnering with our colleagues in physical The authors certify that neither they, nor any members of their immediate families, have any commercial associations (such as consultancies, stock ownership, equity interest, patent/licensing arrangements, etc.)…”
Section: "Imentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further, being female has been identified as an independent risk factor for injury, notably stress fractures [4,6]. Deploymentrelated injuries are more severe with lower return to duty for women [8]. Such disparate rates raise concerns that valuable members of the military risk eliminating themselves through injury as they push towards more elite physical standards established on the male physiology.…”
Section: Injury and Preventionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a recent review of the Department of Defense Trauma Registry statistics, US Servicewomen casualties were younger (26.1 years of age, compared to 27.8 years of age for males); had more severely rated injuries and overall higher injury severity scores compared to their male counterparts, despite the most common mechanism of battle-injury being IEDs for both genders (Hylden, Johnson & Rivera, 2014). Further reviews have analysed US databases to assess whether there is a difference in long-term disability and subsequent return to duty rates between Servicemen and Servicewomen (Rivera, Hylden & Johnson, 2015). Though US Servicewomen deployed between 2001 and 2011 had lower rates of pain disorders, they had a higher prevalence of arthritic conditions (58%) compared to their male counterparts (35%).…”
Section: Deployment Lengthmentioning
confidence: 99%