US Army Field Manual on CD in Adobe Acrobat (.PDF) format.
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What's inside:
This publication serves as a guide and a reference for trained members of the Armed Forces Medical
Services and other medically qualified personnel on the recognition and treatment of biological warfare BW) agent casualties. Information contained in this publication may also be relevant for the diagnosis and
treatment of patients with naturally acquired diseases or illnesses due to pathogens with BW potential.
Scope
- This publication:
- Classifies and describes potential BW agents.
- Provides procedures for collecting, handling and labeling, shipping, and identifying
potential BW agents.
- Describes procedures for medical diagnosing, treating, and management of BW casualties.
- Describes medical management and treatment in BW operations.
- The material in this publication is applicable to both the conventional battlefield and the
integrated environment of the battlefield. (For the purpose of this publication, the integrated environment
is intended to mean warfare and/or contingency operations where nuclear, biological, and chemical [NBC]
weapons/agents are being employed or have a high probability of being employed in addition to conventional
weapons.)
- The treatment modalities contained in this manual differ from standard textbooks in that they
apply to BW agent exposures. The method of exposure for most BW agents is by inhalation; whereas, the
endemic disease exposure (if applicable) is by other means. Some are by ingestion, some by arthropod
bites, and others by dermal contact with the agent. This does not preclude service members becoming BW
casualties by these means.
- The use of the term "level of care" in this publication is synonymous with "echelon of care" and
"role of care." The term "echelon of care" is the old North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) term.
The term "role of care" is the new NATO and American, British, Canadian, and Australian (ABCA) term.
PAGES: 115
PUBLICATION DATE: JULY, 2000
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