Military Service, Exposure to Trauma, and Health in Older Adulthood: An Analysis of Northern Vietnamese Survivors of the Vietnam War
Male
Health Status
Vietnam Conflict
03 medical and health sciences
Life Course
0302 clinical medicine
and Society
Humans
Family
Survivors
Veterans
Aged
Civilians
Depression
Military service
Middle Aged
Politics and Social Change
3. Good health
Logistic Models
Mental Health
Military Personnel
Vietnam
Health
Asian Studies
Female
War
DOI:
10.2105/ajph.2014.301925
Publication Date:
2014-06-12T20:17:23Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
Objectives. We sought to better understand the association between early life exposure to war and trauma and older adult health status in a developing setting.Methods. We analyzed data of 405 Vietnamese men and women in 1 northern Vietnam commune who entered early adulthood during the Vietnam War and who are now entering late adulthood (i.e., ages 55 years and older in 2010).Results. The toll of war’s trauma in the aging northern Vietnamese population was perceptible in the association between exposure to war trauma and various measures of physical health, including negative self-reported health and somatic symptoms. Killing another person and being exposed to toxic substances in warfare was especially detrimental to health in older adulthood. War traumas were likely implicated more strongly as determinants of late adulthood health in men than in women. The weak association between trauma exposure and reported depressive symptoms raised questions about measuring mental health.Conclusions. Military service and war trauma were important determinants of older adult health beyond the US context, given the widespread waging of war and concentration of recent armed conflicts within developing societies.
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