Medical Readiness of the Reserve Component
- PMID: 28083248
- PMCID: PMC4945271
Medical Readiness of the Reserve Component
Abstract
The reserve components (RCs) of the U.S. military must ensure that reservists are not only properly equipped and trained, but also medically ready to serve. Medical readiness means that service members are free from health-related conditions, including dental conditions, that could limit their ability to carry out their duties. Medically ready reservists require less medical and dental support in theater and fewer medical evacuations from theater, both of which save money and free assets for other purposes. This article identifies existing medical readiness requirements, quantifies the current status of RC medical readiness, identifies obstacles to achieving compliance, and suggests options for improving medical readiness in a cost-effective manner. The authors find that time and expense are the major barriers to the RCs achieving their overall goals for medical readiness. Recommendations include standardizing medical readiness criteria across services, improving data reporting and archiving processes, providing incentives to individuals and units to achieve medical readiness, and continuing to extend TRICARE coverage to reservists prior to deployment.
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References
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- American Dental Association Survey Center, 2009 Survey of Dental Fees, Chicago, December 2009.
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- Defense Manpower Data Center, Unique SSAN Activations as of May 3, 2011, Contingency Tracking System daily processing files, 2011.
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- Department of Defense Instruction 6025.19, Individual Medical Readiness (IMR), January 3, 2006. As of June 2, 2011: http://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/corres/pdf/602519p.pdf
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- DMDC—see Defense Manpower Data Center.
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- DoDI—see Department of Defense Instruction.
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