Army Medical Specialist Corps in Vietnam
by
Colonel Ann M. Ritchie Hartwick, U. S. Army, Retired
Background
Though American military advisers had been in French Indochina since World
War II, and the American Advisory Group with 128 positions was assigned to
Saigon in 1950, the Army Surgeon General did not establish a hospital in
Vietnam until 1962 (the Eighth Field Hospital at Nha Trang) to support
American personnel in country. Between 1964 and 1969 the number of American
military personnel in Vietnam increased from 23,000 to 550,000 as American
combat units were deployed to replace advisory personnel in support of
military operations.
Between 1964 and 1973 the Army Surgeon General deployed 23 additional
hospitals established as fixed medical installations with area support
missions. These included surgical, evacuation, and field hospitals and a
3,000 bed convalescent center, supported by a centralized blood bank,
medical logistical support installations, six medical laboratories, and
multiple air ambulance ("Dust Off") units. Air evacuation of the
wounded defied the terrain, mountainous canopied jungle, flooded delta,
dusty plain, and provided increased security for the wounded. The Army
medical buildup in Vietnam was completed in 1968, with 5,283 Army hospital
beds available in country.
To understand the rationale for the assignments and missions of dietitians
and physical therapists during the Vietnam War, an overview of the medical
chain of command structure in Vietnam is helpful. Prior to August
1967, the Army placed medical assets, including the 44th Medical
Brigade, under command of the 1st Logistics Command with a separate Office
of the Surgeon reporting to the Commander, United States Army, Vietnam
(USARV). The Office of the Command Surgeon and the 44th Medical
Brigade were combined on 10 August 1967, and the 44th Medical
Brigade was then reassigned from 1st Logistics Command to USARV. The
44th included a Brigade Headquarters and three to four Medical Groups which
were established and dissolved as medical needs dictated throughout
the war.
On 1 March 1970, Army medical dual staff functions were reduced with the
establishment of the U.S. Army Medical Command, Vietnam
(Provisional). The 68th Medical Group, operational
on 18 March 1966, was located in Long Binh and supported the medical mission
in the III and IV combat tactical zones (CTZs). The 55th Medical Group,
operational in June 1966, supported the medical
mission in the northern II CTZ and was located at Qui Nhon. The 43d Medical
Group, operational in November 1965, supported the medical mission for
southern II CTZ and was located at Nha Trang. And, in October 1967, the 67th
Medical Group, located at Da Nang, assumed medical support responsibility
for I CTZ.
The hospitals
in which these women served were varied: multiple quonset huts assembled
along the beach, an old hotel which had been converted, tents erected among
sandbags and concertina wire, converted schools. Their
housing included hotel rooms at the former Metropole Hotel (which was
bombed as they slept), shared trailers whose advantage was air conditioning
during the oppressive heat of summer, beach bungalows with half-screen walls
which partially filtered the blowing sand, four-cot rooms while awaiting
transfer.
Telephone
communication was difficult. Tape recorders were necessary personal
equipment, maintaining touch with loved ones at home. The majority of Army
dietitian and physical therapists who served in Vietnam were lieutenant
colonels and majors. Some served in country with their husbands. Some were
assigned to Vietnam from Army hospitals in the
Pacific, but the majority came from postings in the United States. On R and
R some traveled to Macao, Australia, Thailand or Japan.
By June 1972,
redeployment reduced American military personnel strength in South Vietnam
from 549,500 to 49,000 service members. The political decisions placing the
responsibility for defeating the enemy, militarily and politically, in the
hands of the Vietnamese government had been made. The
last Army dietitian and physical therapist to serve in Vietnam, both
women, left Saigon for home in February 1973.
Between 1966
and 1973, over 70 Army Medical Specialist Corps officers served in Vietnam,
married and single, women and men, some serving the second tour in young
professional lives and some finishing twenty-year careers in the service of
their country. Their home towns represented across
section of the United States, as did the combat soldiers for whom they
cared. Some requested extended tours, and others were redeployed in the
middle of their mission. Their service improved the nutritional status of
the combat soldier and provided nutritional therapy for patients of many
nationalities, both military and civilian, friend and foe. Their early
intervention in patient rehabilitation speeded patient recovery and repaired
the wounded soldier.
Army Physical Therapist
The first member of the Army Medical Specialist Corps to serve in Vietnam
was a physical therapist who volunteered for Vietnam duty from her posting
at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, and arrived with the 17th Field Hospital, Saigon,
in March 1966. Between 1966 and February 1973, 43 Army physical therapists,
33 of whom were women, served in South Vietnam. They were assigned in the
II, III, and IV combat tactical zones at the 8th (Nha Trang) and 3d and 17th
(Saigon) Field Hospitals, the 12th (Cu Chi), 24th (Long
Binh), 29th (Can Tho), 36th (Vung Tau), 67th (Qui Nhon), 71st (Pleiku),
85th (Qui Nhon), 93d (Long Binh), and 95th (Da Nang) Evacuation Hospitals,
3d Surgical Hospital (Dong Tam), the 6th Convalescent Center
(Cam Ranh Bay), and MACV Headquarters. They treated military
personnel from the SEATO allied nations—Australia, Korea, New Zealand,
Thailand, the Philippines, South Vietnam—and the United States. Their
patients also included civilians and prisoners of
war.
A total of seven Army physical therapists, six women and one man, served as
physical therapy consultants to the Commander, 44th Medical Brigade. In 1967
Army physical therapists began treating Vietnamese military personnel and
civilians in Army hospitals. This interaction expanded to patient and staff
physical therapy instruction in ARVN (Army, Republic of Vietnam) hospitals
and selected Vietnamese medical staff members affiliated with Army physical
therapy clinics in Japan and Okinawa.
As American combat troops were deployed home from Vietnam in 1970 and the
South Vietnamese government became more responsible for the outcome of the
war, the Army physical therapist advisers assigned to MACV (Military
Assistance Command, Vietnam) headquarters developed eight week courses of
instruction in physical and occupational therapy techniques for bedside
rehabilitation of Vietnamese patients at the 2700-bed hospital at Cong Hoa,
and compiled an illustrated basic course text which was translated into
Vietnamese.
The importance of physical therapy to the individual soldiers whom Army
physical therapists treated and rehabilitated remains a priceless gift. It
restored the use of arms and legs damaged by war, rehabilitated surgical
wounds, increased range of motion, and restored flexibility and
strength following serious burns. The proven success of this combat medical
experience also richly contributed to the collective body of knowledge
related to combat medicine. Army physical therapists established
daily proof that early intervention of physical therapy in patient treatment
programs improved the patients’ medical prognosis by reducing the extent of
injury, shortened healing time (thereby more rapidly returning the
soldier to duty), and improved morale.
Army Dietitian
The establishment of fixed medical installations, and the rapid increase in
the number of combat and support personnel in Vietnam between 1964 and
1969, enlarged the Army medical mission. In May 1966, at the request
of the MACV Surgeon, the first two Army Medical Specialist Corps dietitian
arrived at Tan Son Nhut and were assigned to the 8th Field Hospital, Qui
Non, and the 3d Field Hospital, Saigon. The senior dietitian was appointed
field service adviser to the 44th Brigade and later dietetic consultant to
the USARV Surgeon.
Traditionally, the responsibility for food service in medical field units
had been the function of the command S-4 (Logistics). The decision to assign
Army dietitian to field hospitals in Vietnam in 1966 was based on the
following factors. The 30-day command convalescent leave policy required
patients who physicians determined could be returned to duty within 30 days
to remain under medical care in country. The command decision to utilize A
rations (which require refrigeration) in field hospitals in place of the
traditional B rations (canned, dehydrated foodstuffs which do not
require refrigeration) established a patient feeding program in which
modified diets needed to be formulated and prepared locally. Subsistence
procurement for modified diets required professional analysis and
coordination with command logistical support units. The location of fixed
medical installations in country, and the sophisticated level of medical
care these hospitals were able to provide patients, required diet
therapy applications beyond the scope of training received by quartermaster
personnel traditionally responsible for feeding patients in field
hospitals.
A total of 26 Army dietitian served in Vietnam, 20 women and six men. They
served in all four combat tactical zones, from the mountains of the
Central Highlands to the rice paddies of the Mekong delta. Seven, all
women, served as dietetic consultants to the MACV Surgeon. These dietitian
not only formulated meals for hospital patients on modified diets, but
planned the basic troop issue menu for all Army personnel in country and
implemented this menu for all personnel subsisting in medical treatment
facilities.
Subsistence support in Vietnam became more complicated as American troop
levels rose from 23,000 in 1964 to 385,000 in 1966. For instance,
refrigeration was minimal in country in 1966. Successful utilization of
subsistence for patient feeding required standardization of supply and
equality of distribution among the Army, Navy, and Air Force and Korean,
Australian, Thai, Vietnamese, New Zealand and Filipino troops.
Dietitian advised the Command regarding nutritional adequacy of hospital and
troop menus, implementing a 28-day nutritionally balanced menu cycle to
better safeguard constancy and variety of subsistence supply while
preventing food wastage. The dietetic staff
officers assigned to MACV headquarters reviewed and approved construction
plans for hospital food production facilities and recommended necessary
nutrition ration supplementation for attached
SEATO units.
While Army physical therapists were assigned to specific hospitals,
dietitian were assigned to the Medical Group headquarters in each combat
tactical zone. These dietitian were responsible for operation of all
hospital food services, the training of personnel there assigned, and the
nutritional adequacy of meals in all Army, and
some Allied, hospitals within their assigned combat zone. Since road
transportation was unreliable and dangerous, they usually traveled by
helicopter. In exception to this policy, resident dietitian were assigned to
the 3d Field Hospital, Saigon, from late 1969 to February 1973.
Dietitian duties extended beyond the patient’s bedside. One dietitian
accompanied food service equipment by LST (landing ship tank) from the
delivery port to her hospitals to guarantee its safe arrival. Another
supervised the construction of a hospital mess hall.
Many Army dietitian, physical therapists and occupational therapists were
assigned in Guam, Okinawa, Japan, Korea, and Hawaii where patients were
echeloned for continued treatment and rehabilitation prior to being returned
to the United States. In Thailand four Corps dietitian, one woman and three
men, were assigned to the 5th Field Hospital, Bangkok, from 1967 to 1972.
Army Occupational Therapist
While the
majority of occupational therapy support for Vietnam casualties was provided
by therapists in military hospitals in Japan, Hawaii and the United States,
one Army occupational therapist was assigned in Vietnam in 1971. Her mission
was to strengthen rehabilitation programs in the Army drug control treatment
facilities and to discuss occupational therapy support and training for the
Vietnamese civilian population.