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Strategies to Protect the Health of Deployed U.S. Forces: Medical Surveillance, Record Keeping, and Risk Reduction (1999)

Chapter: Appendix D: Principal Investigators' and Advisors' Meeting Dates and Locations

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Suggested Citation:"Appendix D: Principal Investigators' and Advisors' Meeting Dates and Locations." Institute of Medicine. 1999. Strategies to Protect the Health of Deployed U.S. Forces: Medical Surveillance, Record Keeping, and Risk Reduction. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9711.
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APPENDIX D Principal Investigators' and Advisors' Meeting Dates and Locations January 13, 1998 St. Louis, Mo. March 2, 1998 Washington, D.C. April 16, 1998 Washington, D.C. (Workshop) May 6, 1998 Washington, D.C. July 14-15, 1998 Washington, D.C. (Workshop) October 1-2, 1998 Washington, D.C. (Workshop) January 13-14, 1999 Washington, D.C. (Workshop) March 23-24, 1999 Washington, D.C. (Workshop) May 5-6, 1999 Woods Hole, Mass. 221

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Nine years after Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm (the Gulf War) ended in June 1991, uncertainty and questions remain about illnesses reported in a substantial percentage of the 697,000 service members who were deployed. Even though it was a short conflict with very few battle casualties or immediately recognized disease or non-battle injuries, the events of the Gulf War and the experiences of the ensuing years have made clear many potentially instructive aspects of the deployment and its hazards. Since the Gulf War, several other large deployments have also occurred, including deployments to Haiti and Somalia. Major deployments to Bosnia, Southwest Asia, and, most recently, Kosovo are ongoing as this report is written. This report draws on lessons learned from some of these deployments to consider strategies to protect the health of troops in future deployments. In the spring of 1996, Deputy Secretary of Defense John White met with leadership of the National Research Council and the Institute of Medicine to explore the prospect of an independent, proactive effort to learn from lessons of the Gulf War and to develop a strategy to better protect the health of troops in future deployments.

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