Affiliation:
1. Department of Preventive Medicine and Biometrics, Uniformed Services University, 4301 Jones Bridge Road, Bethesda MD 20814
2. Defense Institute for Medical Operations, 1320 Truemper St., Bldg 9122, Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, TX 78236
3. Office of the Command Surgeon, National Defense University, 300 5th Ave, Washington DC 20319
Abstract
ABSTRACTSmall, well prepared, culturally competent, and embedded health engagement teams (EHET) tailored to work within a partner health system, rather than outside of it, will achieve greater mutual benefit, desired military objectives, and better health outcomes for the United States Department of Defence and its partners. EHETs have significant advantages over traditional methods of choice for health security cooperation and humanitarian assistance missions. These advantages include enhanced capability and capacity building, greater trust through intentional cultural expertise, a ready platform for enduring relationships, enhanced host nation legitimacy, and flexibility to target specific issues with greater fidelity. We must first define a prototype EHET, compare the concept against prior units that have executed health engagement, and test it prospectively in employment. The U.S. military and the civilian business world each have extensive experience in employing small teams that the health community can emulate. The ideal EHET should have the following nine characteristics: 12 people or fewer, skillsets for the tasks, global health knowledge, be multidisciplinary, a balance of experience, local language capability, geopolitical and cultural competence, targeted preparation for specific security and health objectives, and joint representation. This paper will explore these components of the prototype EHET as it will be tested in our research project.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine
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