Emergency War Surgery NATO Handbook: Part III: General Considerations of Wound
Management: Chapter XIII: Aeromedical Evacuation
Introduction
United States Department of Defense
As the intensity of combat operations varies, so varies the flow of wounded and the
strain placed upon all echelons of medical care. At the same time, the ever-present
requirement of maintaining available bedspace for additional incoming casualties creates
the constant requirement for evacuation of those occupying the system's forward beds. The
provision of optimal, individualized surgical care, in concert with the efficient
utilization of resources, necessitates close coordination between the direct care
providers at all levels and those responsible for the administration 'and operation of the
full spectrum of medical evacuation.
Aeromedical evacuation is a modern, complex transportation system designed to move
casualties rapidly. Appropriate utilization of this system markedly reduces the time lapse
from initial wounding to definitive care. That such rapid movement of patients results in
overall decreases in morbidity and mortality has been demonstrated repeatedly in recent
conflicts. This holds true regardless of the category of patients considered.
At the point of initial wounding, where medical capability is limited to first-aid
measures, dedicated rotary-wing air ambulances are utilized to provide rapid transfer of
the casualty to an area providing first-line resuscitation capability. Triage is
accomplished at each echelon of medical care Patients are evaluated at aeromedical
evacuation battlefield collecting points and categorized as to their relative needs and
general stability. From these collection points, and with an awareness of each casualty's
individual clinical needs and personal stability, further retrograde movements are
programmed. Patients may be removed from the evacuation chain at any medical facility
along the evacuation route when it is the professional opinion of the evaluating surgeon
that patient safety will be compromised by continued transfer.
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Operational Medicine 2001
Health Care in Military Settings
Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
Department of the Navy
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Operational Medicine
Health Care in Military Settings
CAPT Michael John Hughey, MC, USNR
NAVMED P-5139
January 1, 2001 |
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