This is Part 3 of a 3-part webinar series exploring how military personnel are prepared for environmental extremes in operational settings.
In this final session, Professor Tim Hodgetts examines the evolving role of military medical services in disaster response. As climate-related disasters increase in frequency and scale, military medical teams are increasingly called upon to support humanitarian crises at home and abroad — from pandemics to earthquakes, wildfires to floods.
Tim shares strategic and field-based insight into:
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How military medical services integrate with civilian and NGO-led disaster relief
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The unique strengths and limitations of military-led deployments
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Critical lessons learned from recent responses, including COVID-19 and the 2023 Turkey earthquake
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The value of pre-disaster planning, rapid deployment logistics and joint coordination
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The role of telemedicine, drones and technological innovations in crisis zones
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Challenges in treating trauma, chronic conditions and vulnerable populations in austere settings
This session builds on the physiological foundations of Part 1 and the operational and ethical landscape discussed in Part 2, concluding the series with a focus on practical response, future readiness and civil-military collaboration.
Professor Tim Hodgetts is the Master General of the Army Medical Services and former Surgeon General of the UK Armed Forces. He has held senior NATO medical leadership roles and continues to advise on extreme medicine strategy and deployment.