Overview
The Military Health Surveillance Framework is a systematic monitoring system for service member health outcomes, with particular attention to toxic exposures and their long-term effects. This framework provides the infrastructure for tracking health impacts across military populations exposed to various environmental hazards.
Key Facts
- Purpose: Systematic monitoring of service member health outcomes
- Primary Focus: Toxic exposures and their long-term health effects
- Integration Point: Connected to the Toxic Exposures Research Program (TERP)
Relationships to Other Entities
The framework serves as a foundational surveillance system that feeds into multiple DOD research initiatives:
- toxic-exposures-research-program — U.S. Department of Defense research initiative studying health effects of toxic chemical exposures in military populations
- gulf-war-veterans-mucmi-disability-claims — Multiple veterans filed MUCMI disability claims seeking recognition of service-connected conditions from toxic chemical exposures
- unacknowledged-special-access-programs — Most secretive tier of U.S. military/intelligence operations requiring greater protection than acknowledged SAPs, serving as testing grounds for neurotechnology on civilian populations
- disclosure-project-secrecy-architecture — Analysis of how UFO secrecy has evolved from conventional denial to USAPS and privatized corporate-industrial operations
Source References
— Toxic_Exposures_Research_Program_part4_6.md