- The Army Surgeon General is pushing for greater integration of technology into the military’s medical practices
- Chips implanted in soldiers may soon send constant data to remote hospitals
- This could shorten the time between battlefield injury and treatment
- Data from trackers could also prevent injury by detecting when troops are not ready and fit for battle
- With instant diagnostics and virtual surgical tools, doctors may even operate on isolated soldiers remotely
The Army wants to implant soldiers with advanced health monitoring devices to notify distant doctors of medical emergencies and whether or not troops are combat-ready.
Health trackers like the Fitbit and Apple Watch have become commonplace in the civilian world.
Now the Army Surgeon General Lt Gen Nadja West wants the military wants to implement more advanced versions with higher stakes purposes.
The military hopes to use data from a device, such as a chip implanted into soldier’s wrist, to instantly diagnose and even treat battlefield wounds and health problems.
In coordination with Brooke Army Medical Center, the military branch has introduced a virtual medical center that could some day allow doctors to remotely treat soldiers injured in distant parts of the world.
Soldiers may soon have chips like this one implanted somewhere in their bodies to constantly track their health and send data to doctors to diagnose and even treat them remotely
Another almost 7,000 have been killed in combat.
About 90 percent of these deaths occur before a soldier can be transported to a field hospital.
One quarter of deaths occur due to bleeding that a soldier or medic does not manage to stop in time.
Lt Gen West said that these battlefield deaths ‘were preventable if better hemorrhage control technology had existed.’
The military refers to the vital 60 minutes following an injury as the ‘golden hour.’
Survival rates are drastically higher among soldiers who can be evacuated within this brief window of time, primarily because more time untreated means more blood lost.
A constantly updating health dashboard could tell doctors and commanding officers whether or not their troops were battle ready based on real-time environmental and health data
Key to getting a soldier treatment during the golden hour has been the availability of air evacuations to transport injured men and women off the battlefield.
But at a forum on strategic issues earlier this month, Lt Gen West warned that in future warfare, battlefields may be less accessible and pilots may not have the ‘luxury of uncontested airspace.’
‘Our medics will face doing more with less for longer,’ she added.
Lt Gen West said she believes that the military can leverage modern technology to all but eliminate preventable deaths on the battlefield.
Army Surgeon General Lt Gen Nadja West is spearheading the push to integrate technology like implanted health monitoring chips and remote surgery to the military
She called this the ‘digitization of medicine: the synergy of big data, peripheral monitors, analytics, cognitive computing and artificial intelligence, as well as virtual reality and quantum computing.’
Combining all of those technologies sounds incredibly futuristic, but the military has already started making moves in that direction, and has a plan for how each element could work.
Wearables are already everywhere, and Lt Gen West said that implantable trackers are not far behind, showing a slide of what one might look like – a gold chip in a soldiers wrist.
‘We can do better when every soldier is a censor and continually gather information from them…we could go from periodic screening to continuous monitoring,’ she said.
With this constant flow of data back to military health specialists and commanding officers, soldiers could get immediate treatment and officers could know without a shadow of doubt whether or not their troops were ready for battle.
‘Environmental and health data can be sent to cognitive computing engine to quantify readiness not simply with a yes or no answer but it can give soldier and commander dashboard of readiness,’ said Lt Gen West.
Already, the da Vinci surgical system allows doctors operate remotely by controlling a robot from another room
‘When you have the tools to prevent, it’s amazing what you can prevent,’ she said, speculating that command posts would be integrated with medical technology and professionals.
With the ability to identify the problem, surgeons may even be able to operate remotely.
This ‘already happens all the time,’ said Lt Gen West, referring to the da Vinci surgical system, which allows doctors to control an operating robot from another room.
She even introduced collaborations with NASA to treat astronauts in space using autonomous robots and ‘make it don’t take it’ 3D printers to make instruments in space.
Already, virtual health has been introduced at the Brooke Army Medical Center in El Paso, Texas.
From there ‘we offer over 30 clinical specialties across 18 time zones, in over 30 countries and territories, which enables providers to remotely monitor patient vitals, provide virtual consultations, and assist medics engaged in combat casualty care,’ Lt Gen West said before the Senate in April.
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