Select Public Health and Communicable Disease Lessons Learned During Operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom.

U.S. Army Medical Department journal Pub Date : 2016-04-01
Eric C Garges, Kevin M Taylor, Laura A Pacha
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

History has taught us that the threat of communicable diseases to operational readiness should not be underestimated. The unique operational challenges of a decade at war in Southwest Asia have left us with many new lessons about prevention and mitigation of disease. The successes of military immunization programs demonstrated the successful application of military science to modern combat. Historic maladies such as tuberculosis and malaria continue to challenge our Army health leadership while new challenges with diseases like Q fever and rabies led to questions about our preparedness. These conflicts also brought awareness of issues about the broader deployed community, and the often unique risks that arise when US service members interact more frequently with foreign militaries, local nationals, and third country nationals. Application of these lessons to predeployment training and integration into leadership decision-making will improve our ability to maintain force readiness in future conflicts and adapt Army policy to current evidence and intelligence.

选择在“伊拉克自由”和“持久自由”行动期间获得的公共卫生和传染病经验教训。
历史告诉我们,不应低估传染病对行动准备的威胁。西南亚十年战争的独特业务挑战给我们留下了许多关于预防和减轻疾病的新教训。军事免疫计划的成功证明了军事科学在现代战斗中的成功应用。结核病和疟疾等历史性疾病继续挑战我们军队的卫生领导,而Q热和狂犬病等疾病的新挑战使我们的准备工作受到质疑。这些冲突也带来了对更广泛的部署社区问题的认识,以及当美国服务人员与外国军队,当地国民和第三国国民更频繁地互动时经常出现的独特风险。将这些经验教训应用于部署前训练并整合到领导决策中,将提高我们在未来冲突中保持部队战备状态的能力,并使陆军政策适应当前的证据和情报。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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