Introduction

1st Edition Women's Health Care Purpose of the Manual
Military Medicine Women in the Military

1st Edition

When it was written in 1992, Operational Obstetrics & Gynecology was based primarily on my own personal experiences and perspectives, and focused on the needs of the sea-going population.

In writing the 2nd Edition, I have tried to incorporate several changes:

Military Medicine

Providing health care in military settings is similar, in some ways, to civilian settings and in some ways different.

In civilian settings, the primary responsibility is to the patient, with secondary concerns from the insurance company, employer and family. In military settings, the primary responsibility is to the Command.

In most cases, the interests of the Command and the interests of the patient are the same, particularly in a garrison setting. In a deployed setting, divergence of interest may occasionally arise, creating challenges for the military health care provider.

Military medicine also differs from civilian medicine in three other fundamental ways:

It is because of these differences that clinical problems in an operational setting may be treated differently than the same clinical problem in a civilian setting. The principles of treatment are the same: the application of treatment may be different.

Women’s Health Care

For the most part, women's health care needs are the same as men's health care needs. Women develop coughs, colds, stomach upsets, contusions, abrasions, and fractures. They need preventative care and immunizations.

However, some of their health care needs are different:

 Women in the Military

Military women are a unique group.

They are a generally young, healthy population, pre-screened for most common, chronic diseases. They are, for the most part, physically fit and engage in regular exercise.

Women in the military are, as a group, younger than their male counterparts, are of lower rank, sustain more stress fractures, and utilize health care services twice as often. Even after excluding female-specific reasons (OB, GYN), they still use health care services more often. In this regard, they are similar to civilian women who also use health care services more often. In most studies, like their civilian counterparts, although they use health care services more often, they are generally less satisfied with those services than men.

Women in the military come from many backgrounds. Among Navy recruits, nearly half have been victims of physical domestic abuse prior to entry into the service, a figure similar to their male counterparts.

As a group, women have:

About one-third of the OB-GYN health care visits made by military women are for routine care. Most of the remaining visits are for:

 Purpose of this Manual

This manual is designed to assist those who treat women with gynecologic problems and offer guidance for the continuing care of these women, particularly in isolated settings where gynecologic consultation is not readily available.

The manual is not all-inclusive and is not intended to replace good clinical judgment nor in-depth textbooks, which should be consulted whenever appropriate.

As in most areas of medicine, there may be more than one way to deal with any particular gynecologic problem. For simplicity, one basic approach is usually given here. There are often other approaches that will give very good or superior results.

 

CAPT Michael John Hughey, MC, USNR

Special Projects Officer for the Assistant Chief,
Operational Medicine and Fleet Support
Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
Department of the Navy
2300 E Street NW
Washington, DC
20372-5300

 

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Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
Department of the Navy
2300 E Street NW
Washington, D.C.
20372-5300

Operational Obstetrics & Gynecology - 2nd Edition
The Health Care of Women in Military Settings
CAPT Michael John Hughey, MC, USNR
NAVMEDPUB 6300-2C
January 1, 2000

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