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Recruit medicine / senior editor, Bernard DeKoning.
- Format:
- Book
- Government document
- Series:
- Textbooks of military medicine
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Medicine, Military.
- Military Medicine.
- Military Personnel.
- Medical Subjects:
- Military Medicine.
- Military Personnel.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (lvi, 581 pages)
- Place of Publication:
- Falls Church, Va. : Office of The Surgeon General, U.S. Army ; Washington, D.C. : Borden Institute, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, [2006]
- Summary:
- "Reflecting the increasing military importance of health and fitness in the recruit population, the Borden Institute has released 'Recruit Medicine', the latest book in the 'Textbooks of Military Medicine' series. Aimed at all those involved in providing care and determining policy for military recruits, this volume covers important aspects of recruit medicine, such as the medical qualifications process; health promotion and environmental risk management; chronic diseases such as asthma; injury prevention and management; communicable illnesses; behavioral, dental, and women's health; and recruit mortality. Recruit medicine combines aspects of epidemiology, preventive medicine, primary care, orthopedics, gynecology, psychiatry, and dentistry. The textbook emphasizes the need for healthcare professionals to clearly understand how these factors affect recruits' ability to perform to standard. 'In times past, military medicine has often underappreciated the value of recruit medicine. The military can no longer afford to do so. Because of the rising costs of entering recruits into the training base, and the requirement that they immediately contribute to the combat effectiveness in their first unit of assignment, military medicine must develop a dynamic approach to the use of our knowledge of recruit medicine. As the accessions process transforms volunteer citizens into soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines, military medicine must help maximize every recruit's chance of attaining military standards in health and fitness. A healthy and fit recruit becomes a healthy and fit soldier, sailor, airman, or marine, ' said Army Surgeon General Lieutenant General Kevin C. Kiley. Colonel Bernard L. DeKoning, MD (MC, US Army) the book's senior editor and Assistant Surgeon General (Force Projection), added, 'Just as the military's center of gravity is the individual soldier, sailor, airman, or marine, the individual's center of gravity is good health. An individual in poor health cannot withstand the rigors of combat or stability operations, nor can he or she properly transform information into action. Our sons and daughters who volunteer to protect the nation deserve the very best in military medicine from the moment they choose to enlist.'"--The publisher
- Notes:
- Title from title screen (viewed on September 3, 2008).
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Other Format:
- Recruit medicine
- OCLC:
- 244998473
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