Health Service Support (Joint Publication 4-02)


Book Description

This publication, “Health Service Support (Joint Publication 4-02),” provides doctrine for the planning, preparation, and execution of health service support across the range of military operations. The Military Health System supports the operational mission by fostering, protecting, sustaining, and restoring health. It also provides the direction, resources, health care providers, and other means necessary for promoting the health of the beneficiary population. The principles of health service support (HSS) consist of conformity, proximity, flexibility, mobility, continuity, and control. Conformity with the tactical plan is the most basic element for effectively providing health support. Medical planners must be involved early in the planning process, and once the plan is established, it must be rehearsed with the forces it supports. The principle of proximity is to provide health support to sick, injured, and wounded military personnel at the right time and to keep morbidity and mortality to a minimum. Flexibility is being prepared and empowered to shift medical resources to meet changing requirements. The medical commander must build flexibility into the operation plan (OPLAN) to support the combatant commander's (CCDR's) scheme of maneuver. The principle of mobility is to ensure that medical assets remain within supporting distance of maneuvering forces. Continuity of care and treatment is achieved by moving the patient through progressive, phased roles of care, extending from the point of injury or wounding to the US-support base. Each type of medical unit contributes a measured, logical increment of care appropriate to its location and capabilities. Control is required to ensure that scarce medical resources are efficiently employed and support the tactical and strategic plan. It also ensures that the scope and quality of medical treatment meet professional standards, policies, and US and international law. Health support is provided to military personnel by applying prevention, protection, and treatment capabilities. The five overarching joint medical capabilities for HSS are: first responder care capability, forward resuscitative care capability, theater hospitalization capability, definitive care capability, and en route care capability. This publication has been prepared under the direction of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. It sets forth joint doctrine to govern the activities and performance of the Armed Forces of the United States in joint operations and provides the doctrinal basis for US military coordination with other US Government agencies during operations and for US military involvement in multinational operations. It provides military guidance for the exercise of authority by combatant commanders and other joint force commanders (JFCs) and prescribes joint doctrine for education and training. It provides military guidance for use by the Armed Forces in preparing their appropriate plans. It is not the intent of this publication to restrict the authority of the JFC from organizing the force and executing the mission in a manner the JFC deems most appropriate to ensure unity of effort in the accomplishment of the overall objective.




Health Service Support - Joint Chiefs of Staff Joint Publication 4-02 - Surgeon's Office, Casualty Management, Medical Logistics, Force Health Protection, Combat Operations, Special Operations Forces


Book Description

This publication provides doctrine for the planning, preparation, and execution of health service support across the range of military operations. The Military Health System supports the operational mission by fostering, protecting, sustaining, and restoring health. It also provides the direction, resources, health care providers, and other means necessary for promoting the health of the beneficiary population. Principles of Health Service Support - The principles of health service support (HSS) consist of conformity, proximity, flexibility, mobility, continuity, and control. Conformity - Conformity with the tactical plan is the most basic element for effectively providing health support. Medical planners must be involved early in the planning process, and once the plan is established, it must be rehearsed with the forces it supports. Proximity - The principle of proximity is to provide health support to sick, injured, and wounded military personnel at the right time and to keep morbidity and mortality to a minimum. Flexibility - Flexibility is being prepared and empowered to shift medical resources to meet changing requirements. The medical commander must build flexibility into the operation plan (OPLAN) to support the combatant commander's (CCDR's) scheme of maneuver. Mobility - The principle of mobility is to ensure that medical assets remain within supporting distance of maneuvering forces. Continuity - Continuity of care and treatment is achieved by moving the patient through progressive, phased roles of care, extending from the point of injury or wounding to the US-support base. Each type of medical unit contributes a measured, logical increment of care appropriate to its location and capabilities. CHAPTER I * HEALTH SUPPORT TO JOINT OPERATIONS OVERVIEW * - Introduction * Military Health System * Principles of Health Service Support * Joint Medical Capabilities * CHAPTER II * ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES * Command and Control * Joint Force Surgeon's Office * Organizing the Joint Force Surgeon's Office * Joint Force Surgeon's Office Battle Rhythm * Staff Organizations * Joint Force Surgeon Reachback * CHAPTER III * HEALTH SERVICE SUPPORT * Casualty Management * Patient Movement * Medical Logistics * Health Information Management * CHAPTER IV * FORCE HEALTH PROTECTION * Casualty Prevention * Preventive Medicine * Health Surveillance * Combat and Operational Stress Control * Preventive Dentistry * Vision Readiness * Laboratory Services * Veterinary Services * CHAPTER V * HEALTH SERVICE SUPPORT OPERATIONS * Combat Operations * Stability and Civil-Military Operations * Limited Contingencies and Crisis Response * Defense Support of Civil Authorities * Special Operations Forces * Multinational Operations * Detainee Operations * Operations in a Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Environment * Contractor Support * CHAPTER VI * JOINT HEALTH PLANNING * Introduction * Health Support Planning Considerations * Planning Joint Medical Logistics * Systems and Planning Tools * APPENDIX * A - Hospitalization * B - Patient Movement * C - Service Component Transportation Assets * D - Medical Logistics Support * E - Blood Management * F - Intelligence Support to Joint Health Support * G - Casualty Prevention * H Patient Area Reception * J - Medical Aspects of Reintegration * K - Impacts of the Law of War and Medical Ethics * L - Planning Checklists * M - References * N - Administrative Instructions




Health Service Support


Book Description

The Military Health System supports the operational mission by fostering, protecting, sustaining, and restoring health. It also provides the direction, resources, health care providers, and other means necessary for promoting the health of the beneficiary population. The principles of health service support (HSS) consist of conformity, proximity, flexibility, mobility, continuity, and control. Conformity with the tactical plan is the most basic element for effectively providing health support. Medical planners must be involved early in the planning process, and once the plan is established, it must be rehearsed with the forces it supports. The principle of proximity is to provide health support to sick, injured, and wounded military personnel at the right time and to keep morbidity and mortality to a minimum.










Joint Publication Jp 4-02 Joint Health Services 11 December 2017


Book Description

This publication provides doctrine to plan, prepare, and execute joint and combined health services across the range of military operations. Clarifies United States military roles of medical care. Clarifies Joint Task Force Surgeon notional office organization. Clarifies Armed Services Blood Program operational procedures. Includes new information on comprehensive health surveillance. Includes new information on chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) environmental considerations. Includes new information on elements of Patient Movement System. Updates Patient Movement Items - Asset Tracking System locations. Updates definitions, references, acronyms, and eliminates self-defining terms. Acknowledges tactical combat casualty care integration in support of the joint force. Acknowledges Medical Planners' Toolkit and Joint Medical Planners' Tool as approved means for calculating health services requirements.




Joint Publication Jp 4-02 Health Service Support 26 July 2012


Book Description

This publication provides doctrine for the planning, preparation, and execution of health service support across the range of military operations. This publication has been prepared under the direction of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. It sets forth joint doctrine to govern the activities and performance of the Armed Forces of the United States in joint operations and provides the doctrinal basis for US military coordination with other US Government agencies during operations and for US military involvement in multinational operations. It provides military guidance for the exercise of authority by combatant commanders and other joint force commanders (JFCs) and prescribes joint doctrine for education and training. It provides military guidance for use by the Armed Forces in preparing their appropriate plans. It is not the intent of this publication to restrict the authority of the JFC from organizing the force and executing the mission in a manner the JFC deems most appropriate to ensure unity of effort in the accomplishment of the overall objective. Joint doctrine established in this publication applies to the Joint Staff, commanders of combatant commands, subunified commands, joint task forces, subordinate components of these commands, the Services, and combat support agencies. The guidance in this publication is authoritative; as such, this doctrine will be followed except when, in the judgment of the commander, exceptional circumstances dictate otherwise. If conflicts arise between the contents of this publication and the contents of Service publications, this publication will take precedence unless the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, normally in coordination with the other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has provided more current and specific guidance. Commanders of forces operating as part of a multinational (alliance or coalition) military command should follow multinational doctrine and procedures ratified by the United States. For doctrine and procedures not ratified by the United States, commanders should evaluate and follow the multinational command's doctrine and procedures, where applicable and consistent with US law, regulations, and doctrine.




Army Health System (ATTP 4-02)


Book Description

This publication, “Army Health System,” provides the capstone doctrine for the Army Health System (AHS) in support of the modular force. The Army Health System is the overarching concept of support for providing timely medical support to the tactical commander. It discusses the current medical force structure modernized under the Department of the Army (DA) approved Medical Reengineering Initiative and the Modular Medical Force that is designed to support the brigade combat teams and echelons above brigade units. As the Army's capstone medical doctrine statement, this publication identifies medical functions and procedures that are essential for operations covered in other Army Medical Department (AMEDD) proponent manuals. This publication depicts Army Health System operations from the point of injury, illness, or wounding through successive roles of care within the theater and evacuation to the continental United States (CONUS) support base. It presents a stable body of operational doctrine rooted in actual military experience and serves as a foundation for the development of AMEDD proponent manuals on how the AHS supports the modular force. The AHS is a component of the Department of Defense (DOD) Military Health System. It is responsible for the operational management of the health service support (HSS) and force health protection (FHP) missions for training, predeployment, deployment, and post deployment operations. The AHS includes all mission support services performed, provided, or arranged by the AMEDD to support HSS and FHP mission requirements for the Army and as directed, for joint, intergovernmental agencies, and multinational forces. Although Joint doctrine describes the capabilities of the Military Health System as a taxonomy of care, this description does not adequately address how the AMEDD must organize and equip its forces to successfully accomplish the health care delivery in the noncontiguous operational environment. Therefore, the AHS is in consonance with and supports the concept of the taxonomy of care, but AMEDD support is discussed in terms of capability packages specifically designed to support Army formations. Although the Military Health System is an interrelated system which may share medical services, capabilities, and specialties among the Service components, it is not a joint mission command system. Each Service component develops its medical resources to support its Service-specific mission. This results in the development of different types of organizations with varying levels of capability, mobility, and survivability. Although joint medical resources may have similar nomenclature to describe the unit, they are not usually interchangeable.




Army Techniques Publication ATP 4-02.55 Army Health System Support Planning March 2020


Book Description

This U.S. Army manual, Army Techniques Publication ATP 4-02.55 Army Health System Support Planning March 2020, provides guidance to the medical commander, medical planner, and command surgeon at all levels of command in planning Army Health System support. Users of Army Techniques Publication 4-02.55 must be familiar with unified land operations established in Army Doctrine Publication 3-0; the operations process as stated in Army Doctrine Publication 5-0; how Army forces conduct large-scale combat operations described in Field Manual 3-0; Army plans and orders production as promulgated in Field Manual 6-0; mission command systems of tactical units and the mission command process established in Army Doctrine Publication 6-0; Army Health System support described in Field Manual 4-02; and the Joint Health Services described in Joint Publication 4-02. The principal audience for this publication is all medical commanders, command surgeons, and their staffs, and nonmedical commanders involved in medical planning. Army Techniques Publication 4-02.55 updates Army Health System planning topics while adopting current terminology and concepts as necessary. The Army Health System is a complex system of interrelated and interdependent systems which provides a continuum of medical treatment from point of injury or woundingthrough successive roles of medical care and is inextricably linked to the Military Health System through the Defense Health Agency Role 4 Hospitals for the provision of definitive care as patients are evacuated to continental United States from Role 3 medical treatment facilities in theater. The medical planner is able to provide the best possible Army Health System for all Army operations by carefully applying operational medicine doctrine and principles. The Army Health System provides support to forces deployed across the full range of military operations in all operational arrangements. The Army Health System is a complex system of highly synchronized, interrelated, and interdependent systems comprised of ten medical functions. The medical functions align with medical disciplines and specialty training with the capabilities required to provide state-of-the-art care to Soldiers regardless of where they are deployed or assigned.




Medical Evacuation Atp 4-02.2 / Fm 4-02.2


Book Description

Army Techniques Publication 4-02.2, "Medical Evacuation," provides doctrine and techniques for conducting medical evacuation and medical regulating operations. Medical evacuation encompasses both the evacuation of Soldiers from the point of injury (POI) or wounding to a medical treatment facility (MTF) staffed and equipped to provide essential care in theater and further evacuation from the theater to provide definitive, rehabilitative, and convalescent care in the continental United States (CONUS) and the movement of patients between MTFs or to staging facilities. Medical evacuation entails the provision of en route medical care; supports the joint health service support system; and links the continuum of care. In addition, it discusses the difference between medical evacuation and casualty evacuation (CASEVAC), as well as coordination requirements for and the use of nonmedical transportation assets to accomplish the CASEVAC mission. The Army Health System (AHS) is a complex system of interrelated and interdependent systems which provides a continuum of medical treatment from the POI or wounding through successive roles of medical care to definitive, rehabilitative, and convalescent care in the CONUS, as required. Medical evacuation is the system which provides the vital linkage between the roles of care necessary to sustain the patient during transport. This is accomplished by providing en route medical care and emergency medical intervention, if required, and to enhance the individual's prognosis and to reduce long-term disability.