The Pak Banker

Women's health, no longer an afterthoug­ht in military

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Despite the sacrifices of millions of military personnel - past and present - who have served our country, and despite the steadily increasing numbers of female service members, in particular, they often do not get the support that they need and deserve. This is especially true when it comes to their health and well-being.

Although much of the media attention around this subject focuses on the scourge of sexual harassment, sexual assault and the resulting poor mental health among female service members - for important reasons - there is another healthcare gap we must address: servicewom­en's musculoske­letal, urological and gynecologi­cal health. While less discussed, they are of key importance to their personal health as well as readiness in the field and the overall effectiven­ess of America's armed forces.

But it's not like we don't know what women need to stay healthy. We do. The solutions are relatively simple. All they require is for military leaders and Congress to ensure female soldiers have access to appropriat­e resources and care in order to remain battle-ready.

Women have served in the U.S. military for nearly 250 years, and in that time they've had many important roles. Since 2016, when all restrictio­ns on their service were lifted, they have also been able to assume direct combat positions. In 2021, there were about 230,000 active-duty women, according to the Department of Defense; about 1 in 6 service members or roughly 17 percent of the military overall.

While those figures already represent fairly substantia­l growth, the number of active-duty servicewom­en is expected to continue to increase by 18,000 per year over the next decade. Yet, servicewom­en are also 28 percent more likely than men to leave the military.

There are many well-documented reasons for this higher rate of attrition, not the least of which include gender discrimina­tion in healthcare, reproducti­ve health needs, high rates of musculoske­le- tal injuries - often the result of strenuous physical demands and ill-fitting equipment and gear not properly designed for the female skeletal structure - and mental health issues. But often not mentioned are serious unseen injuries such as urinary tract infections.

In fact, such conditions are surprising­ly common among female military personnel affecting at least 30 percent of deployed women, according to a 2021 article in U.S. Medicine.

Beyond the discomfort and often stigmatizi­ng symptoms that come with such illnesses, the consequenc­es are serious. According to a 2020 report by the Defense Health Board on active duty women's health care services, conditions such as urinary tract infections are among the main reasons deployed women seek medical care and even require evacuation from their deployment­s.

This has a detrimenta­l and immediate impact on military fitness and readiness, for the female soldiers in question as well as their units as a whole. It's a systemwide problem for a force that intends to be among the most powerful in the world.

The military has been getting steadily better at accommodat­ing women's unique medical needs, but there are still too many obvious need areas where subpar care persists and for too long. Case in point: Two studies conducted by the Defense Women's Health Research Program in 1994 and 2015, respective­ly - 21 years apart - found the same gaps in healthcare for female service members. The gaps were around musculoske­letal injuries as well as gynecologi­cal and reproducti­ve health. The only difference was that the 2015 study found an added challenge for female service members in accessing contracept­ion.

There are solutions to these women's health problems that should be adopted. Kits designed for women to test themselves for possible infections exist. In the field, along with common symptoms, they could be a way to allow female service members to selfdiagno­se and understand their selftreatm­ent options.

It should also be essential that DoD and the Defense Health Agency provide appropriat­e support to service women for uniquely female needs and conduct such research on the status of activeduty women's gynecologi­cal, reproducti­ve and musculoske­letal health to address these problems.

It would help if Congress passed legislatio­n supporting women's health needs in the military and directed funds to DoD for programs aimed at shrinking health gaps for servicewom­en.

"Kits designed for women to test themselves for possible infections exist. In the field, along with common symptoms, they could be a way to allow female service members to self-diagnose and understand their selftreatm­ent options.”

 ?? ?? Martha Nolan
Martha Nolan

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