Andrew Robertson

Articles by Andrew Robertson

The Evolution of Operational Health support Provided to the United States, United Kingdom and Australian Special Operations Forces from 1940–2024

Introduction Over the last 85 years, medical support to Special Operations Forces (SOF) units has evolved from rudimentary beginnings to highly sophisticated care. While some of this evolution reflects changes in clinical medicine during that period, particularly in civilian trauma management, the progress in health support in other areas reflects the innovative forefront of military… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 33 Number 3 Doi No https://doi-ds.org/doilink/06.2025-78272768/JMVH

CHEMICAL AGENTS Contact Poisons: A Brief Touch

INTRODUCTION GAIL BELL, IN HER BOOK “THE POISON PRINCIPLE”, tries to establish why people use poison2. She looks back over the centuries, from Cleopatra and Socrates to more modern poisoners like Crippen, and speculates that, with advanced analytical technology, the heyday of poisons is over2. But is it? Contact poisons are those chemicals and toxins… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 13 No. 2 Doi No https://doi-ds.org/doilink/04.2023-39671179/JMVH Vol 13 No 2

CHEMICAL AGENTS CS and Reactive Airways Dysfunction

INTRODUCTION CS IS THE GENERIC NAME FOR the lacrimating agent 0-chlorobenzylidene malononitrile (2-chloroben zalmalonitrile), which was originally developed in 1928 by B.B. Corson and R.W. Stoughton1,2 CS is normally solid, which is dis­seminated either dissolved in a solvent Liquid (ace­ tone, methyl isobutyl ketone or methylene chloride) or in a particulate form as a smoke.1 The latter… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 13 No. 2

Abstract from the Literature

Gupta L, Ward J, Hayward RSA. Future directions for clinical practice guidelines: Needs, lead agencies and potential dissemination strategies identified by Australian general practitioners. ANZ J Pub Health 1997; 21(5): 495-499 There has been an increasing interest in developing clinical practice guidelines for general practitioners as a means of improving health outcomes. We conducted a… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 6 No. 3

BIOLOGICAL AGENTS And Anthrax

ANOTHER INTERESTING FORTNIGHT has come to an end, as our ADF ships and personnel pre-deploy to the Gulf. One of the key issues over this period has been the Australian Defence Forces Anthrax Vaccination Program. While generally not controversial, the Anthrax Vaccination Program has reached that status with help from the media and the ADF… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 13 No. 2

Contact Poisons: A Brief Touch

‘Murder by poisoning is a crime of devilish wickedness and inhumanity which no language can adequately describe. ‘ John Glaister (1954) Introduction Gail Bell, in her book ‘The Poison Principle’, tries to establish why people use poison2. She looks back over the centuries, from Cleopatra and Socrates to more modem poisoners like Crippen, and speculates… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 10 No. 2 Doi No https://doi-ds.org/doilink/03.2023-18255864/JMVH Vol 10 No 2

Editorial – After the war

After the war The theme for this year’s AMMA conference is “After the  War: Repatriation, recovery and public health”. The impetus for this theme was the realisation that 100 years ago, in 1919, our forebears were just coming to terms with the fact that the Great War, the War to end all Wars, was finally… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 27 No. 4

Editorial – Repatriation

Repatriation In early 1917, even before victory was assured, Prime Minister ‘Billy’ Hughes promised the country’s armed forces that ‘When you come back we will look after you’. Repatriation or ‘Repat’ was born. The theme of this issue is ‘repatriation’ – a very Australian concept that is as relevant today as it was in 1917…. Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 27 No. 2

Editorial – Wither Nuclear?

Wither Nuclear? In this issue, Heslop and Westphalen review medical chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear (CBRN) defence in the Australian Defence Force.1 The ongoing interest of militaries and non-state actors in these weapons, while waxing and waning over the last 100 years, continues, and requires appropriate military health preparations. While chemical, biological and, to a… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 27 No. 1

The Battle of the Sunda Strait

On 28th February 1942, HMAS PERTH, a light cruiser, and USS HOUSTON, a heavy cruiser, having survived the Battle of the Java Sea the previous day, stopped briefly in Tanjung Priok, Jakarta’s port, to take on limited supplies of fuel and ammunition, before being ordered to withdraw to the south of Java via the Sunda… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 24 No. 4

Inside this Edition

Editorial – Baros of Sirovi I have just returned to Perth after a month on board USNS Mercy as part of Pacific Partnership 2015. In Bougainville, near the port of Kieta, a group of Australians from the ship had the opportunity to clean-up and refurbish a World War 2 memorial monument to Baros of Sirovi…. Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 23 No. 3

Inside this edition

This issue will probably be arriving in people’s letter boxes  just  as  we  are  preparing  to commemorate the  100th   Anniversary   of   the   Gallipoli   landings on 25 April 1914. The battles fought in Gallipoli, northern Africa and  the  Western  Front,  at  sea  and in the air, would cement the ANZACs reputation as a fighting force and… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 23 No. 2

Inside this edition

As we move into 2015, we have a unique opportunity to look back to the origins of Australian Defence Force health services 100 years ago, the changes in Defence healthcare in the intervening years and where we might expect to go into the future. The fundamentals of conflicts and wars themselves have changed – from… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 23 No. 1

Inside this Edition

As we move closer to the 100th anniversary of the start of the Great War, I am constantly reminded of the sacrifices made by our ancestors to fight that war. In this issue, the Journal has reprinted the HMAS Sydney’s Medical Officer’s log for 09 November 1914 as she battled the SMS Emden near the Cocos Islands. In keeping with this World War 1 theme, this issue has two excellent articles on the challenges of Army recruiting during the war and on the formation of medical units in response to the epidemic in the Palestine in 1918. Further articles on World War I will be published in future issues.

This issue also looks at the management of mid-facial fractures, mental distress in military personnel and the history of tuberculosis, a disease that has plagued conflict and humanitarian assistance situations, in two parts.

As Editor, I continue to look for relevant and interesting papers, both academic and operational, for future issues. I encourage all our readers to consider publishing in JMVH in your area of expertise or interest.

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 22 No. 2

Inside this Edition

During the recent Australasian Military Medicine Association (AMMA) conference in Adelaide in early November, I was fortunate to stumble upon a nearby antiquarian bookshop, where I found a copy of Surgeon Rear-Admiral T.T. Jeans “Reminiscences of a Naval Surgeon”, where he details his career as a naval medical officer and surgeon between 1895 and 1925…. Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 21 No. 4

Inside this Edition

Sixty-eight years ago, on 15 August 1945, hostilities with Japan officially ended at 12 noon. When His Royal Highness Duke of Gloucester made the announcement in Canberra, three flags were flown. They were the flag raised by Australian troops at Villiers Bretonneux in the First World War, the flag worn by HMAS SYDNEY when she… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 21 No. 3

Inside this Edition

On the 21 July 1919, the RMO of 30th Battalion AIF, Captain Gordon Robertson demobilised after returning to Australia on the Leicestershire on 21 June 1919. Post demobilisation, he took up a station near Tumblong, New South Wales, where he built his new home. He set up a medical practice in nearby Gundagai, becoming a… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 20 No. 4

Inside this Edition

The theme for this Edition is the history of developments in military medicine. As I was preparing for this Edition, I was reminded of some letters that I had from my great-uncle, Captain Gordon O. Robertson, who was the Regimental Medical Officer for the 57th Battalion, A.I.F. in 1918.   On the 10th July 1918, he… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 20 No. 2

Inside this Edition

Welcome to 2012, which promises to be another challenging year, with the London Olympics and the ‘end of the world’ planned. Let’s hope the latter joins the ranks of previous predictions and the 2013 Editorial is being prepared around this time in 12 months. This issue brings together the abstracts of the varied and excellent… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 20 No. 1

Inside this Edition

The Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) has just completed successfully in Perth with the joint assistance of the Australian Government, Australian Defence Force (ADF) and the Western Australian State Government. While the considerable capabilities of the ADF did not need to be seriously tested, the planning from all agencies ensured a smooth and trouble-free… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 19 No. 4

Inside this Edition

Over sixty years ago, at 4 AM on 25 June 1950, North Korea invaded South Korea. Australian forces were committed rapidly, with the Australian Government sending HMAS Shoalhaven and HMAS Bataan to assist on 29 June, No. 77 Mustang Fighter Squadron on 30 June and 3rd Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment on 26 July 1950. Welcome… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 19 No. 2

Inside this Edition

As I write this Editorial, I am on a flight to Port Hedland and am once again reminded of the size of this country, its often harsh environmental conditions and the ongoing challenges in defending it. This Edition further develops a number of those themes, from historical military challenges to operational clinical management and mental… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 18 No. 4

Lessons Learned

One of the important lessons that all military health personnel should learn early on is that, as originally expostulated by George Santayana, “those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” I have recently reviewed some old letters from my Great-Uncle Captain Gordon Ochiltree Robertson, who served as the Regimental Medical Officer (RMO)… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 18 No. 3

Inside this Edition

Billy Bacon couldn’t outrun the German machine gun bullets, although his actions saved the lives of two of his fellow diggers. I have just returned from seeing ‘Beneath Hill 60’, which details the story of the 1st Australian Tunnelling Division and the mining of the Messine Ridge in Belgium in 1916. This excellent Australian movie… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Inside this Edition

Java Rabble

Fred Skeeles Victoria Park: Hesperian Press; 2008 (ISBN 978-0-85905-419-5: 151 pages)   In September 2000, I reviewed ‘Proud Echo’ by Ronald McKie for Australian Military Medicine1. ‘Proud Echo’ narrated the history of the Battle of Sunda Straits, and of the events that followed, from the accounts of individual sailors. On the night of 28 February… Read more »

By Andrew Robertson In   Issue Volume 17 No. 1 Doi No https://doi-ds.org/doilink/11.2021-25398761/JMVH Vol 17 No 1