PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Responsibilities of a veterinary augmentation package in support of a contingency operation.

Journal:
Military medicine
Year:
2000
Authors:
Bentzel, D E & Moloff, A L
Affiliation:
Bravo Squad · United States
Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

During a military operation in Albania from April to July 1999, a veterinary team was assigned to provide care for military working dogs and ensure food safety. They faced challenges like inadequate housing for the dogs, lack of emergency equipment, and issues with stray animals. The team also inspected food supplies to make sure they were safe for consumption, eventually switching to a better food delivery system. Their work was crucial for the health of the dogs and the safety of the food provided to troops. Overall, the veterinary team successfully managed these responsibilities despite the difficult conditions.

Abstract

A veterinary augmentation package (VAP) was assigned to the 212th Medical Treatment Facility supporting Task Force Hawk outside Tirana, Albania, from April 15 to July 4, 1999. The VAP's mission was to provide level I and II veterinary care, including emergency treatment, stabilization, and evacuation of military working dogs, and to ensure food safety and public health. This mission allowed the VAP to act as a force multiplier and to play an integral role in force protection. In the first 30 days of the operation, the VAP was confronted with animal issues concerning housing of the military working dogs, no access to emergency equipment, antiquated sets, kits, and outfits, and stray animal control. The food safety mission initially entailed inspections of operational rations and inspection of local sources for food procurement. Operational rations were replaced by A-rations, which required a central ration breakdown point to facilitate disbursement of food. The final step was to initiate the prime vendor program so that food was delivered directly to the dining facilities. Inspections of the port at which the food was arriving and a close association with preventive medicine personnel ensured a successful prime vendor operation. Veterinarians on future deployments should be prepared to supplement sets, kits, and outfits, pack an aid bag, and work closely with preventive medicine personnel, all while possibly living under the austere conditions of a combat zone.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10920653/