Medical Readiness Training
Limited Participation by Army Medical Personnel Gao ID: NSIAD-93-205 June 30, 1993GAO reported in August 1992 (GAO/NSIAD-92-175) that many Army medical personnel had not trained during peacetime to perform their assigned wartime roles during Operation Desert Storm. This report revisits that issue and discusses the (1) training that is now available to prepare Army medical personnel for their wartime mission, (2) factors inhibiting medical personnel's participation in this medical readiness training, and (3) steps the Army has taken to improve medical readiness training.
GAO found that: (1) the primary courses required for medical officers provide basic skills training necessary for an officer's first assignment; (2) all active and reserve enlisted medical personnel are required to work in Health Services Command () hospitals and medical treatment facilities to obtain hands-on training related to their military occupational specialty; (3) Army medical personnel at all levels are required to participate in field training exercises to prepare for their wartime missions; (4) each officer is required to take the Army Medical Department's (AMEDD) basic and advanced courses before attending other senior officer courses or schools; (5) the HSC medical personnel mission during peacetime is to provide health care to over 3.5 million active duty personnel, retirees, and their dependents; (6) the HSC hospital operating budget may be reduced to the extent that physicians' participation in readiness training displaces patient work load; (7) medical officials believe that efforts to contain Civilian Health and Medical Program for the Uniformed Services' costs often preclude physicians from participating in medical readiness training; and (8) AMEDD has undertaken several initiatives such as regional training sites, training course revisions, and caretaker hospitals that may allow easier access to training facilities and increase training participation by active and reserve personnel.