Military medicine


The term military medicine has a number of potential connotations. It may mean:
  • A medical specialty, specifically a branch of occupational medicine attending to the medical risks and needs of soldiers, sailors and other service members. This disparate arena has historically involved the prevention and treatment of infectious diseases, and, in the 20th century, the ergonomics and health effects of operating military-specific machines and equipment such as submarines, tanks, helicopters and airplanes. Undersea and aviation medicine can be understood as subspecialties of military medicine, or in any case originated as such. Few countries certify or recognize "military medicine" as a formal speciality or subspeciality in its own right.
  • The planning and practice of the surgical management of mass battlefield casualties and the logistical and administrative considerations of establishing and operating combat support hospitals. This involves military medical hierarchies, especially the organization of structured medical command and administrative systems that interact with and support deployed combat units.
  • The administration and practice of health care for military service members and their dependents in non-deployed settings. This may consist of a medical system paralleling all the medical specialties and sub-specialties that exist in the civilian sector.
  • Medical research and development specifically bearing upon problems of military medical interest. Historically, this encompasses all of the medical advances emerging from medical research efforts directed at addressing the problems encountered by deployed military forces many of which ultimately prove important beyond the purely military considerations that inspired them.

    Legal status

Military medical personnel engage in humanitarian work and are "protected persons" under international humanitarian law in accordance with the First and Second Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols, which established legally binding rules guaranteeing neutrality and protection for wounded soldiers, field or ship's medical personnel, and specific humanitarian institutions in an armed conflict. International humanitarian law makes no distinction between medical personnel who are members of the armed forces and those who are civilian volunteers. All medical personnel are considered non-combatants under international humanitarian law because of their humanitarian duties, and they may not be attacked and not be taken as prisoners of war; hospitals and other medical facilities and transports identified as such, whether they are military or civilian, may not be attacked either. The red cross, the red crescent and the red crystal are the protective signs recognised under international humanitarian law, and are used by military medical personnel and facilities for this purpose. Attacking military medical personnel, patients in their care, or medical facilities or transports legitimately marked as such is a war crime. Likewise, misusing these protective signs to mask military operations is the war crime of perfidy. Military medical personnel may be armed, usually with service pistols, for the purpose of self defense or the defense of patients.

Historical significance

The significance of military medicine for combat strength goes far beyond treatment of battlefield injuries; in every major war fought until the late 19th century disease claimed more soldier casualties than did enemy action. During the American Civil War, for example, about twice as many soldiers died of disease as were killed or mortally wounded in combat. The Franco-Prussian War is considered to have been the first conflict in which combat injury exceeded disease, at least in the German coalition army which lost 3.47% of its average headcount to combat and only 1.82% to disease. In new world countries, such as Australia, New Zealand, the United States and Canada, military physicians and surgeons contributed significantly to the development of civilian health care.
Improvements in military medicine have increased the survival rates in successive wars, due to improvements in medical evacuation, battlefield medicine and trauma care. Similar improvements have been seen in trauma practices during the Iraq war. Some military trauma care practices are disseminated by citizen soldiers who return to civilian practice. One such practice is where major trauma patients are transferred to an operating theater as soon as possible, to stop internal bleeding, increasing the survival rate. Within the United States, the survival rate for gunshot wounds has increased, leading to apparent declines in the gun death rate in states that have stable rates of gunshot hospitalizations.
In many English-speaking countries the military title of surgeon is applied to any medical practitioner, due to the historical evolution of the term. The US Army Medical Corps retains various surgeon United States military occupation codes in the ranks of officer pay grades, for military personnel dedicated to performing surgery on wounded soldiers.

Impact

According to a 2025 study, which examined inter-state wars from 1900 onwards, found that militaries that have better military medicine have improved military effectiveness.

Military medicine by country

North America

Canada

  • Royal Canadian Medical Service
  • Royal Canadian Dental Corps
  • Canadian Forces Health Services Group
  • Surgeon General
  • National Defence Medical Centre

    United States

  • Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs
  • Military Health System
  • Military Medicine, academic journal
  • TRICARE
  • United States Unified Medical Command
  • Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences
  • Medical Education and Training Campus
  • Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine
  • Defense Health Agency
  • National Center for Medical Intelligence
  • Health Professions Scholarship Program
  • Joint Task Force National Capital Region/Medical
  • Alexander T. Augusta Military Medical Center
  • Association of Military Surgeons of the United States
  • Tactical Combat Casualty Care
  • Armed Forces Institute of Pathology
  • Armed Forces Radiobiology Research Institute
  • Defense Health Program Budget Activity Group
  • Department of Defense Medical Examination Review Board
  • National Museum of Health and Medicine
  • Medicine in the American Civil War
  • National Museum of Civil War Medicine
;U.S. Army
  • Surgeon General of the U.S. Army
  • Army Medical Department
  • Battalion Aid Station
  • Borden Institute
  • Combat Support Hospital
  • Fort Detrick
  • Fort Sam Houston
  • Forward Surgical Teams
  • United States Army Medical Corps
  • United States Army Nurse Corps
  • United States Army Veterinary Corps
  • Mobile Army Surgical Hospital
  • Portable Surgical Hospital
  • 68W, the "combat medic"
  • Combat Medical Badge
  • Expert Field Medical Badge
  • Textbook of Military Medicine published by the U.S. Army
  • United States Army Medical Department Center and School
  • United States Army Medical Department Museum
  • U.S. Army Dental Command
  • U.S. Army Medical Command
  • United States Army Medical Research and Development Command
  • United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases
  • United States Army Medical Command, Vietnam
  • United States Army Medical Command, Europe
  • Walter Reed Army Medical Center
  • Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
  • U.S. Army Public Health Center
  • Army Medical School
  • United States Army Health Services Command
  • Army Medical Museum and Library
  • Army Medical Department regimental coat of arms
  • Combat lifesaver course
;U.S. Navy
  • Surgeon General of the U.S. Navy
  • Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
  • United States Navy Health Care
  • U.S. Navy Medical Corps
  • U.S. Navy Dental Corps
  • U.S. Navy Nurse Corps
  • U.S. Navy Medical Service Corps
  • U.S. Navy Hospital Corpsman
  • United States Naval Hospital
  • Special amphibious reconnaissance corpsman
  • Battalion Aid Station
  • Naval Hospital Corps School
  • Naval Medical Center San Diego
  • Naval Medical Center Portsmouth
  • National Naval Medical Center
  • Naval Hospital Yokosuka Japan
  • Naval Hospital Guam
  • Naval Health Clinic New England
  • Naval Health Clinic Cherry Point
  • Naval Medical Research Command
  • Naval Health Research Center
  • Naval Medical Forces Atlantic
  • Naval Medical Research Unit South
  • Naval Medical Research Unit Dayton
  • Naval Submarine Medical Research Laboratory
  • Charleston Naval Hospital Historic District
  • Old Naval Observatory
  • Hospital ship
  • USNS Mercy
  • USNS Comfort
  • Sick bay
  • Loblolly boy
  • Diving medicine
  • United States Navy staff corps
;U.S. Air Force
  • Surgeon General of the U.S. Air Force
  • U.S. Air Force Medical Service
  • United States Air Force Nurse Corps
  • United States Air Force Pararescue
  • United States Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine
  • Museum of Aerospace Medicine
  • Aeromedical evacuation
  • Critical Care Air Transport Team
  • Expeditionary Medical Support System
  • Aviation medicine

    Europe

France

  • French Defence Health Service
  • École du service de santé des armées

    Belgium

  • Belgian Medical Component

    Germany

  • Bundeswehr Joint Medical Service
  • Bundeswehr Medical Academy
  • Luftwaffe Institute of Aviation Medicine
  • Naval Medical Institute
  • Generaloberstabsarzt
  • Generalstabsarzt
  • Generalarzt
  • Oberstarzt
  • Oberfeldarzt
  • Oberstabsarzt
  • Stabsarzt
  • Oberarzt
  • Assistenzarzt

    Italy

  • Corpo sanitario dell'Esercito Italiano
  • Corpo sanitario militare marittimo
  • Corpo sanitario aeronautico
  • Servizio sanitario dell'Arma dei carabinieri

    Russia

  • Main Military Medical Directorate
  • Kirov Military Medical Academy
  • Military academies in Russia#Kuybyshev Military Medical Academy
  • Military Medical Business, academic journal
  • Russian Museum of Military Medicine