Predeployment training for forward medicalisation in a combat zone: the specific policy of the French Military Health Service
Autor: | Sylvain Ausset, Anne Chrisment, Jean-Yves Martinez, Stéphane Mérat, Emmanuel Bordier, Clément Dubost, Mathieu Boutonnet, B. Lenoir, Marc Puidupin, Christian Bay, T. Villevieille, Pierre Pasquier, Jacques Escarment, François Pons, Emmanuel Batjom |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Emergency Medical Services
Warfare Quality Assurance Health Care media_common.quotation_subject Poison control Occupational safety and health Military medicine Government Agencies Injury Severity Score medicine Emergency medical services Humans Military Medicine Iraq War 2003-2011 General Environmental Science media_common Teamwork Afghan Campaign 2001 business.industry Service provider medicine.disease Military personnel Military Personnel General Earth and Planetary Sciences Wounds and Injuries Combatant Medical emergency France business |
Zdroj: | Injury. 45(9) |
ISSN: | 1879-0267 |
Popis: | Introduction To improve the mortality rate on the battlefield, and especially the potentially survivable pre-Medical Treatment Facility deaths, Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) is now considered as a reference for management of combat casualty from the point of injury to the first medical treatment facility. TCCC comprises of a set of trauma management guidelines designed for use on the battlefield. The French Military Health Service also standardised a dedicated training programme, entitled “Sauvetage au Combat” (SC) (“ forward combat casualty care ”), with the characteristic of forward medicalisation on the battlefield, the medical team being projected as close as possible to the casualty at the point of injury. The aim of our article is to describe the process and the result of the SC training. Materials and methods Records from the French Military Health Service Academy – Ecole du Val-de-Grâce administration, head of the SC teaching programme, defining its guidelines, and supporting its structure and its execution, were examined and analyzed, since the standardisation of the SC training programme in 2008. The total number of trainees was listed following the different courses (SC1, SC2, SC3). Results At the end of 2013, every deployed combatant underwent SC1 courses (confidential data), 785 health-qualified combatants were graduated for SC2 courses and 672 Role 1 physician–nurse pairs for SC3 courses. Conclusion The SC concept and programmes were defined in France in 2007 and are now completely integrated into the predeployment training of all combatants but also of French Military Health Service providers. Finally, SC teaching programmes enhance the importance of teamwork in forward combat medicalisation settings. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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