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Author Institute of Medicine (U.S.). Committee on Department of Homeland Security Occupational Health and Operational Medicine Infrastructure, author

Title Advancing workforce health at the Department of Homeland Security : protecting those who protect us / Committee on Department of Homeland Security Occupational Health and Operational Medicine Infrastructure, Board on Health Sciences Policy, Institute of Medicine of the National Academies
Published Washington, D.C. : National Academies Press, 2014

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Description 1 online resource (xxiv, 356 pages) : illustrations
Series Online access: NCBI NCBI Bookshelf
Contents Introduction -- The DHS workplace and health system -- A comprehensive framework for ensuring the health of an operational workforce -- The current state of workforce health protection at DHS -- Leadership commitment to workforce health -- Organizational alignment and coordination -- Functional alignment -- Information management and integration -- Considerations for implementation -- Department of Homeland Security component agency health protection program descriptions -- Referenced policy documents -- Performance measure framework and balanced scorecard example -- Questions for the Department of Homeland Security components -- Public and private sector approaches to workforce health protection -- Committee meeting agendas -- Committee biosketches
Summary The more than 200,000 men and women that make up the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) workforce have been entrusted with the ultimate responsibility - ensuring that the homeland is safe, secure, and resilient against terrorism and other hazards. Every day, these dedicated individuals take on the critical and often dangerous challenges of the DHS mission: countering terrorism and enhancing national security, securing and managing the nation's borders, enforcing and administering U.S. immigration laws, protecting cyber networks and critical infrastructure, and ensuring resilience in the face of disasters. In return, DHS is responsible for protecting the health, safety, and resilience of those on whom it relies to achieve this mission, as well as ensuring effective management of the medical needs of persons who, in the course of mission execution, come into DHS care or custody. Since its creation in 2002, DHS has been aggressively addressing the management challenges of integrating seven core operating component agencies and 18 supporting offices and directorates. One of those challenges is creating and sustaining a coordinated health protection infrastructure. Advancing Workforce Health at the Department of Homeland Security examines how to strengthen mission readiness while better meeting the health needs of the DHS workforce. This report reviews and assesses the agency's current occupational health and operational medicine infrastructure and, based on models and best practices from within and outside DHS, provides recommendations for achieving an integrated, DHS-wide health protection infrastructure with the necessary centralized oversight authority. Protecting the homeland is physically and mentally demanding and entails many inherent risks, necessitating a DHS workforce that is mission ready. Among other things, mission readiness depends on (1) a workforce that is medically ready (free of health-related conditions that impede the ability to participate fully in operations and achieve mission goals), and (2) the capability, through an operational medicine program, to provide medical support for the workforce and others who come under the protection or control of DHS during routine, planned, and contingency operations. The recommendations of this report will assist DHS in meeting these two requirements through implementation an overarching workforce health protection strategy encompassing occupational health and operational medicine functions that serve to promote, protect, and restore the physical and mental well-being of the workforce
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Online resource; title from digital title page (National Academies Press, viewed on July 24, 2014)
Subject United States. Department of Homeland Security -- Medical care
SUBJECT United States Department of Homeland Security
United States. Department of Homeland Security fast
Subject Occupational diseases -- United States
Administrative agencies -- Employees -- Medical care -- United States
Medical care.
Medical care -- Quality control.
Occupational Health
Delivery of Health Care
Quality Assurance, Health Care
Government Agencies
Patient Care
HEALTH & FITNESS -- Diseases -- General.
MEDICAL -- Clinical Medicine.
MEDICAL -- Diseases.
MEDICAL -- Evidence-Based Medicine.
MEDICAL -- Internal Medicine.
Medical care -- Quality control
Medical care
Occupational diseases
SUBJECT United States https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D014481
Subject United States
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780309296489
030929648X