Date of Award

2000

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Health Administration

College

College of Health Professions

First Advisor

Carleen Stoskopf

Second Advisor

Dough Johnson, II

Third Advisor

Walter Jones

Fourth Advisor

Michael T. Ryan

Abstract

The threat of the use of a biological agent as a weapon presents the American public with a potential for catastrophic consequences with massive loss of life and economic disaster. Reducing the effect of a biological warfare attack requires resources beyond those found within local or state governments. The integration of appropriate federal assets in a timely fashion will significantly reduce casualties and economic loss. Military medical assets support the federal response. Managing the consequences of a domestic biological warfare attack is a new role for the military, requiring different support packages than those configured to support the war fight. This paper examines existing policy for accessing and integrating military assets into the federal response to support state and local disaster capability. Processes are contrasted with differing requirements intrinsic to a biological warfare scenario. Insights into barriers are presented. A model for utilization of military support that balances requirements with capability is proposed.

Rights

All rights reserved. Copyright is held by the author.

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