Mental Health in F-111 Maintenance Workers: The Study of Health Outcomes in Aircraft Maintenance Personnel (SHAOMP) General Health and Medical Study

Date

Authors

Attia, John R
D'Este, Catherine
Schofield, Peter W
Brown, Anthony M
Gibson, Richard
Tavener, Meredith
Horsley, Keith
Harrex, Warren
Ross, James
Whitworth, Judith

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We sought to contrast mood disorder symptoms in F-111 aircraft Deseal/Reseal maintenance personnel with appropriate comparisons. METHODS: Participants completed a comprehensive health assessment, including measures of mood disorder, self-reported mood symptom questionnaire items, and review of anxiolytic and depression medication. Multiple logistic regression was conducted for each outcome using exposure group and potential confounders as explanatory variables. RESULTS: There was high agreement between self-reported mood disturbance and objective tests. The exposed group was more likely to self-report previous diagnoses of depression/anxiety, had higher use of antidepressant medications, and had increased risk of diagnosis of depression/anxiety. Results were consistently strong against both comparison groups, with the exposed more likely to have mental distress and social dysfunction when compared with the Australian population. CONCLUSIONS: There is robust evidence for an association between F-111 Deseal/Reseal exposure and impaired mental health.

Description

Citation

Source

Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31