337915
Full Disclosure: Toward an Honest Commemoration of the American War in Vietnam
Monday, November 2, 2015
: 12:30 p.m. - 12:50 p.m.
April 30, 1975: Reunification of Vietnam: ended 20 years of United States military troops in Vietnam. Following the Gulf of Tonkin resolution of 1964, in 1965 3,500 US marines landed at DaNang air force base, adding to the 16,000 US “advisors”. During the 1950’s the US created the Military Assistance and Advisory Group, screening French requests for assistance against the Vietminh. From 1955-1961 the US had 3200 military advisors in Vietnam. By 1963 it was 16,000. In 1961 President Kennedy authorized use of the chemical herbicide Agent Orange. In 1965 President Johnson escalated troops, launched Rolling Thunder, the sustained bombing campaign against north Vietnam, and signed executive order for use of napalm. In March, 1968 500 Vietnamese women and children were tortured and massacred in a village in south Vietnam called My Lai. Several years later in January, 1973 the Paris Peace Accords were signed, ending US troop involvement. By then, 5 million acres of forest land and 14% of agricultural land had been destroyed by the Agent Orange spraying which caused the death and illness of civilians and soldiers, harmed future generations, and reduced sustainability of the ecosystems in Vietnam. The US had dropped 7.8 million tons of munitions, more than used in World War II on Germany and Japan. An estimated 800,000 tons failed to detonate, contaminating 20% of the land, killing 100,000 Vietnamese since 1975. By the end of the conflict 3.4 million US troops had served, 58,200 died, 304,000 were wounded. 4.9 million Vietnamese were killed.
Learning Areas:
Ethics, professional and legal requirements
Other professions or practice related to public health
Public health or related public policy
Learning Objectives:
Describe history of US involvement in Vietnam
Identify devastation caused by use of chemical herbicides, artillery, and tonnage of bombs
Discuss health issues on Americans and Vietnamese as result of the conflict
Keyword(s): Activism, War
Presenting author's disclosure statement:Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I was an active duty Navy nurse who cared for the wounded at Oak Knoll Naval Hospital 1967-1969; court martialled for peace activities in 1969
For 31 years was an executive administrator in public hospitals in NYC
For 20 years have been teaching at NYU, in School of Professional Studies, Healthcare Management
Co-cordinator of Vietnam Agent Orange Relief and Responsibility Campaign; board member VVAW, Institute for Community Living; member, Veterans For Peace
Any relevant financial relationships? No
I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines,
and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed
in my presentation.