Health Highlights: May 31, 2018

Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:

1 in 3 US military Injuries in Iraq, Afghanistan Weren’t on Battlefield

Of the nearly 30,000 U.S. service members who’ve been injured during military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, about a third were due to non-battlefield events such as vehicular accidents, falls or equipment mishaps, new research shows.

The type of non-battle injuries also accounted for about 1 in every 10 fatalities among soldiers injured in these conflicts, according to a study published May 30 in JAMA Surgery.

The new research was led by Dr. Tuan Le of the US Army Institute of Surgical Research at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas. His group looked at Department of Defense data on nearly 30,000 service members injured in Iraq and Afghanistan between 2003 and 2014.

Nonbattle injuries comprised just over 34 percent of injuries and 11.5 percent of deaths among service members treated at a medical military facility during that time, the research showed.

The rate of nonbattle injuries was higher among women (66.3 percent) than men (48.3 percent), and in the Air Force (66.3 percent) and Navy (48.3 percent) than in members of the Army (34.7 percent) and Marine Corps (25.7 percent), the study found.

Falls made up 21.3 percent of nonbattle injuries and vehicular accidents nearly 19 percent, the study found.

However, there was one silver lining to the report, said Dr. Todd E. Rasmussen, an associate dean of research at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland. He wrote an accompanying commentary to the study.

“Not to be overlooked are successes identified in this analysis, such as the relatively low rate of unintentional firearm injury,” said Rasmussen, who wasn’t involved in the study. “The fact that only 728 service members sustained an inadvertent firearm injury during a 12-year period in which hundreds of thousands of troops were deployed with a great assortment of weaponry is notable.”

That statistic,”points to the professionalism of military members as it relates to possessing firearms as well as the success of training and safety initiatives,” Rasmussen said.

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Birth Control Pills Recalled Over Potential Pregnancy Risk

Almost 170,000 birth control pill packs are being recalled over a manufacturing error that could lead to unplanned pregnancy, maker Allergan says.

Taytulla physician sample packs include active capsules and inactive placebos that are designed to be taken in a certain order. The recalled packs may have been packaged out of order, so that a person who expected to take an active capsule may actually take a placebo, CBS News reported.

Allergan said the error was isolated to a single pack, but the entire lot was recalled as a precaution. The packs are marked with lot number 5620706 and an expiration date of May 2019, CBS News said.

The network reported Allergan would notify users by letter.

“If patients have concerns regarding the possibility of an unintended pregnancy, they should consult their physician,” the drugmaker said in a recall statement posted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.