Before 2015 The lineage of the DCPH-A can be traced back to the
Army Industrial Hygiene Laboratory, which was established in 1942 under the direct jurisdiction of the Army surgeon general. AIHL originally was located at the
Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health; it had a staff of three and an annual budget of $3,000. Its mission was to conduct
occupational health surveys and investigations within the
Department of Defense industrial production base, a mission that proved beneficial to the nation's war effort. In October 1945, AIHL was transferred to what is now Aberdeen Proving Ground - South. From 1940 to 1960, AIHL's mission and personnel continued to expand, and AIHL became the U.S. Army Environmental Hygiene Agency (USAEHA) located at Edgewood Arsenal which was later merged with Aberdeen Proving Ground. During the 1960s and early 1970s, AEHA provided a variety of public health services to all US-based Army installations, including water supply, water and air pollution control, industrial hygiene, and others. In 1973, USAEHA became a subordinate command of the U.S. Army Health Services Command (the latter later became the
United States Army Medical Command). The following year, USAEHA was given command of the health and environmental resources of the Army medical laboratories. These assets became USAEHA subordinate commands. In 1994, USAEHA was re-designated as the
United States Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine. In addition to its continental United States regional commands, USACHPPM also had two subordinate commands. In 1995, USACHPPM Europe was activated in Landstuhl,
Germany, and USACHPPM Pacific was activated, moving in 1997 to
Camp Zama,
Japan. In 2010, the center was merged with the United States Army Veterinary Command (VETCOM) to form
U.S. Army Public Health Command. VETCOM supported almost 500 DOD installations worldwide and included the DOD Veterinary Food Analysis and Diagnostic Laboratory and the DOD Military Working Dog Veterinary Service. Through this merger, a uniquely capable military organization was born—one that embodies the “
One Health” approach to public health.
One Health is the concept that health in animals, people, and the environment is interrelated; that is, the health of each contributes to the health of all. The formal uniting of prevention, health promotion, and veterinary missions allowed for full coordination, synchronization, and integration of the military
public health services around the globe. USAPHC, inactivated on October 1, 2016, had six subordinate elements: the Army Institute for Health and five regional commands located at
Fort George G. Meade in
Maryland;
Joint Base San Antonio in
Texas;
Joint Base Lewis-McChord in
Washington;
Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in
Germany; and
Camp Zama in
Japan. USAPHC's mission was to promote health and prevent disease, injury, and disability of Soldiers and retirees, their Families, and Army
civilians, and to provide
veterinary medicine services for the Army and Department of Defense. USAPHC also provided consulting services to senior military leaders, commanders both deployed and in garrison, and military medical and health professionals.
U.S. Army Public Health Center The APHC reached provisional status on August 17, 2015 and full operating capacity on October 1, 2016. Headquartered at
Aberdeen Proving Ground,
Maryland, the DCPH-A is a field operating activity of the
U.S. Army Medical Command, but it is unique among MEDCOM organizations in these ways: • Its “patients” are populations, that is groups of people—military units, their families, or Army civilian employees, for example—rather than individuals. • It emphasizes prevention of disease, injury, and disability, rather than healing those who have already experienced these conditions. • It is proactive, optimizing health by educating members of the Army population about healthy behaviors, empowering them to build and sustain their own good health. ==Criticism==