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1.
Reg Anesth Pain Med ; 2024 Jun 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38942425

ABSTRACT

Regional anesthesia (RA) is commonly used in perioperative settings of developed and well-resourced environments. RA has significant potential benefits when used in resource-limited environments, including disaster, mass casualty, and wartime environments. RA offers benefits over general anesthesia and opioid-based analgesia, including decreased risk of complications, decreased reliance on mechanical ventilation, improved cost efficiency, and others. The decreasing cost of ultrasound matched with its smaller size and portability increases the availability of ultrasound in these environments, making ultrasound-guided RA more feasible. This daring discourse discusses some historical examples of RA in ultralow resource environments, both man-made disasters and natural disasters. Future investigations should increase the usefulness and availability of RA in resource-limited environments.

2.
Mil Med ; 2024 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38877889

ABSTRACT

This work explores the challenges of delivering medical care in the geographically dispersed and resource-constrained environment of Distributed Maritime Operations (DMO) and Expeditionary Advanced Base Operations (EABO). Traditional medical planning approaches may struggle to adapt to the vast operational space, extended evacuation times, and limited medical force present in these scenarios. The concept of a Medical Common Operating Picture (COP) emerges as a potential solution. By providing a shared view of the medical situation across the theater, encompassing logistics, personnel, and patient data, a medical COP has the potential to facilitate medical command and control (MED C2) in DMO/EABO. The implementation of a medical COP has the potential to optimize resource allocation, enhance situational awareness, streamline medical evacuation, and reduce healthcare provider moral injury in large-scale combat operations. A medical COP will allow medical planners to make informed decisions on triage, resupply, and evacuation, ensuring the best use of limited medical resources. This is done by leveraging a comprehensive understanding of the medical landscape, enabling informed clinical and operational decision-making by humanitarian and combat personnel respectively. A fully realized medical COP system will enable a dynamic theater evacuation policy, balancing the conflicting needs of patient care at higher echelons with the operational expediency of returning servicemembers to their operational units, thereby maximizing evacuation effectiveness. It will further enable medical personnel to perform dynamic casualty triage based on operational realities, mitigating potential ethical dilemmas. Implementing such a medical COP system will require overcoming communication limitations to facilitate data exchange and potentially integrating clinical decision support tools for real-time data analysis and recommendations. It will also require the rapid adoption of modernized operational medicine documentation solutions by medical assets within the operational forces. Ultimately, this work suggests that a medical COP has the potential to bridge the gap between traditional medical planning and the unique demands of DMO/EABO, ultimately optimizing casualty care, maximizing resource efficiency, and preserving the fighting force.

3.
Mil Med ; 189(1-2): 33-37, 2024 Jan 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37540573

ABSTRACT

The Falklands Campaign was fought a significant distance from the home base of the British Fleet. The planning and delivery of medical care during this campaign can provide significant lessons for strategic medical planning in other far spread geographic locations, including the Indo-Pacific region. Consideration of doctrine, including Role 1-4 facilities and the golden hour, may need to be reconsidered in light of changing scenarios. New concepts such as the "90-in-90" and "3-in-3" are also discussed as a framework for future planning in the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command area of responsibility.

4.
BMJ Mil Health ; 2023 Jul 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37400128

ABSTRACT

Advances in technology have improved the ability for real-time communication and enhanced awareness of medically related information on the battlefield. A government off-the-shelf platform, Team Awareness Kit (TAK), may enhance the ability for battlefield healthcare delivery, evacuation, telecommunication, and medical command and control. Integration of TAK into existing medical infrastructure provides a global view of resources, patient movement and direct communication, significantly reducing the 'fog of war' as it relates to battlefield injury and evacuation. Rapid integration and adoption are technically feasible with minimal resource investment. This technology can be rapidly scaled for the increasingly interconnected world of healthcare delivery.

5.
Mil Med ; 186(7-8): 826-828, 2021 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33884426

ABSTRACT

This case report is about a 51-year-old active duty male with JAK2 mutation and medical history significant for prehepatic portal hypertension from portal vein thrombus on lifelong anticoagulation with rivaroxaban, an oral factor Xa inhibitor, presenting with closed-loop small bowel obstruction requiring emergent laparotomy. We present this surgical case as it required emergent reversal of the oral factor Xa inhibitor with andexanet alfa.


Subject(s)
Factor Xa Inhibitors , Factor Xa , Blood Coagulation , Factor Xa Inhibitors/pharmacology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Recombinant Proteins , Rivaroxaban/pharmacology
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