Research Paper Title
Smoking and Injury in Royal Marines’ Training.
Background
Training for the Royal Marines (RMs) is considered to be one of the most arduous military training regimes in the world. Approximately 16% of the annual intake of recruits suffer an injury. Smoking has been found to be a predisposition to injury.
Objective
To examine the relationship between recruits’ smoking status on entry to training and subsequent incidence of injury.
Method
Retrospective, longitudinal analysis of 1 year’s intake of RM recruits at Commando Training Centre Royal Marines.
Results
A significantly greater proportion of RM recruits who were smokers on entry to training experienced a physical injury during the course than their non-smoking counterparts (chi-square = 8.15, P < 0.01). A recruit who smoked on entry to training was almost twice as likely to acquire an injury during training [relative risk = 1.7 (95% CI = 1.2-2.8)].
Conclusion
Smoking status of RM recruits in training was significantly associated with injury.
Source: Munnoch, K.& Bridger, R.S. (2007) Smoking and Injury in Royal Marines’ Training. Occupational Medicine (London). 57(3), pp.214-216.
Related Articles
- Royal Marines learning the ropes on the toughest course of all (thetimes.co.uk)
- The Operational Effectiveness of Hunter Company (bootcampmilitaryfitnessinstitute.wordpress.com)