Walter Reed, Military Medicine, a New Commission
KMATTOX at aol.com
KMATTOX at aol.com
Mon Mar 5 13:10:37 GMT 2007
Senator Lieberman was just on National TV and made many of the points a
great number of you have made on this list and to your Senators and
Representatives. It is obvious that there will be a Congressional and Administrative
investigation and Commissions. I have several suggestions as you continue to
communicate your views to your congress people.
1. The fired Commanding Officer at Walter Reed was a sacrificial lamb.
His career is ruined by this knee jerk firing, when others should have been
the focus of reprisials. He might should be reinstated.
2. BRAC did make some good recommendations at the time, but those
recommendations need to be reanalyzed in view of current war. Maybe other closures
and consolidations are in order while expansions are in order in other
areas. BRAC should have representatives from the civilian sector
3. A new Military Medicine Commission must not be politicized, but must
include representatives from critical care, trauma, emergency medicine, etc.
4. Many within the Military Industrial Complex are spending money on
things NOT of major concern during the time of THIS war. We have had over 16,000
MAJOR open amputations during the last 5 years in Iraq and Afghanistan and
spent about $100,000 on research in this area. The Army and Navy spent $100
million on research on Malaria treatment last year while only 25 military
people got malaria, most from not taking their drugs. I do not say get rid of
appropriate research and development, just keep it relative.
5. It is long time that military medicine had a DEPUTY Secretary of
Defense for Health Affairs rather than several layers down having an Assistant
Secretary several layers down.
6. Except for Special Operations it is long overdue time that the
military medical services be FUSED for that is the way they work right now, and very
effectively. Military Medicine as taught by Uniformed Services University
for Health Sciences at Bethesda is ALL SERVICE and serves as a model of the
direction military medicine should go. A 3-4 star general doctor should also
represent ALL military medicine at the joint chiefs of staff.
Thank each of you for your insight, your communications, and your
leadership. Obviously some on this list have been able to communicate with Senator
Lieberman, who is taking a lead in the Senate Commission. Let us help him and
others keep focused.
Kenneth L. Mattox, MD
Houston
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