Military medicine, 175, 8: 118, 2010 118 military medicine


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CONCLUSION 
Correcting such ignorance and neglect can be done, but it will 
be a three-phased challenge. First, what knowledge, already 
available and valid concerning performance, endurance, and 
resilience factors must be assessed. 
Second, the determination of what new research will 
broaden our knowledge. We know overloading the soldier is 
detrimental to performance and endurance. How do we stop 
commanders from doing it? We know battle fatigue is a natu-
ral reaction to an unnatural and often bizarre situation that can 
lead to chronic PTSD. But how much exposure is needed? Is 
there a dose–response curve? Can the stress control mecha-
nism be reset? We know repetitive deployments are bad, but 
how bad are they? What have we learned from the deployment 
experience of the 10th Mountain Division in the 1990s or as 
peacekeepers in the Balkans? What have we learned from 
other armies addressing the same problem? 
Third, the philosophy of line to medical education and com-
munication that existed just a century ago must be resurrected. 
Medical science must be continually translated into strategic
operational, and tactical terms that a commander can under-
stand. The role of the line staff surgeon must be energized, 
and, most importantly, the theory and practice of military 
hygiene as an educational imperative for line and medical offi -
cers must be re-established for the 21st century and beyond. 
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