Monographie
Preparing for the future of combat casualty care : opportunities to refine the military health system's alignment with the national defense strategy / Brent Thomas
Type de contenu
- Texte
Type de médiation
- sans médiation
Type de support
- Volume
Titre(s)
- Preparing for the future of combat casualty care : opportunities to refine the military health system's alignment with the national defense strategy / Brent Thomas
Auteur(s)
Autre(s) auteur(s)
Publication
- Santa Monica (Calif.) : Rand
Date de copyright
- C 2021
Description matérielle
- 1 vol. (XXVI-158 p.) : ill., cartes, graph., diagr., tabl. ; 23 cm
ISBN
- 1-977406-86-6
- 978-1-977406-86-6
EAN
- 9781977406866 br.
Classification décimale Dewey
- 616.980 23
Note(s)
- RR-A713-1
Note sur les bibliographies et les index
- Bibliogr. p. 147-158. Notes bibliogr.
Note sur le contenu
- The Challenges of Future Conflict Framed by the National Defense Strategy Challenges to Combat Casualty Care in Future Combat Operations Enhancing Care on the Future Battlefield Enhancing the Global MHS Network of Medical Supply Caches Improving the Resilience of Medical Logistics and Sustainment Preparing Medical Support for Homeland Missions Improving Casualty Support Through Enhanced Resilience in Medical Supply Chains Recommendations and Policy Implications Appendix A: An Overview of Triage Principles Appendix B: Models for Analyzing Military Medical Support Postures
Résumé ou extrait
- The Military Health System (MHS), through its global network of facilities and providers, meets the health care needs of more than 9 million service members and their dependents during peacetime. It is also responsible for treating casualties during combat operations and in the aftermath of disasters and humanitarian crises. The 2018 National Defense Strategy emphasizes a need to prepare for future combat operations that could be distinctly different from those of the past few decades. The evolving security environment is characterized by precision missile strike capabilities and a risk that adversaries will target critical military infrastructure. These types of attacks could significantly degrade U.S. combat capabilities and significantly increase casualties. There is a range of opportunities for the MHS to align its capabilities to address potential future threats. But to implement effective mitigation strategies, it requires an understanding of the numbers and types of casualties it can expect in a future combat operation, the capability and capacity to treat and evacuate casualties, the network of storage facilities and transportation assets to ensure access to medical supplies, the capacity and capabilities of the U.S. health care system overall, and gaps in the medical supply industrial base. A thorough analysis of these sources of risk highlights how the MHS can build a more agile and resilient medical support capability so that it can continue to provide the best care possible to the warfighter both at home and in combat
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