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Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Australian Digger wounded in Afghanistan

The Australian Defence Force (ADF) has taken a role of transparency when it releases reports on wounded and fallen soldiers.....
Soldiers
The soldier has become the second wounded in Afghanistan since the start of this year.

This is something that I hope that the Canadian Forces can model itself after.

Other Examples of true transparency....

AN Australian soldier has been wounded in Afghanistan after his patrol was hit by an improvised explosive device.
A local interpreter died and an Afghan soldier was also wounded in the blast that occurred in the Chorah Valley region of Uruzgan Province on Saturday.
The Australian soldier, a member of Mentoring Task Force Two, was evacuated to the ISAF medical facility at the multi-national base Tarin Kowt, a statement from the defence force said.
He had surgery there before being flown to the ISAF medical facility at Kandahar for further treatment.
Joint Task Force 633 Commander, Major General Angus Campbell, said although the soldier's wounds were considered serious; he was now in a satisfactory condition.
"Our soldiers and their Afghan partners show great courage in facing the threat of improvised explosive devices on a daily basis," Maj Gen Campbell said.  Two Australian soldiers have been wounded in action in Afghanistan since the beginning of 2011, while a total of 166 soldiers have been wounded since Australia commenced operations in Afghanistan in 2001, defence said.
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/national/australian-soldier-wounded-in-afghanistan-blast/story-e6frfkvr-1225988996305#ixzz1CpnLkGdV



AN Australian soldier seriously wounded by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan has been flown to Germany for specialist treatment.
The unnamed soldier was one of two members of the Mentoring Task Force (MTF-2) hurt in separate improvised explosive device blasts in the Baluchi Valley region of Oruzgan province on Sunday.
MTF-2 commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Darren Huxley said one of the soldiers received superficial wounds.
However, the other suffered serious blast and fragmentation wounds when the IED exploded near an Afghan National Army foot patrol accompanied by Australian soldiers.
“He is still in a serious condition. He has been flown to Germany to the major NATO hospital there,” Lieutenant Colonel Huxley said from the Australian base at Tarin Kowt.
“He has got some serious wounds but none of them are life-threatening.
“His mother has been flown out to be with him as well.”
The soldier was initially treated at the medical facility at Tarin Kowt before being transported to the medical facility in Kandahar for further treatment.
These were the first casualties experienced by MTF-2, which replaced MTF-1 in Oruzgan from September. They brought the number of Australian wounded this year to 62, most from IEDs.
Since Australia started operations in Afghanistan, 162 soldiers have been wounded. In that time, 21 have been killed, 10 this year.
AAP

ANA and ADF prep for a combined patrol

AN AUSTRALIAN soldier who was wounded in Afghanistan last month has been flown home.
The soldier was injured on December 19 when he was hit by an improvised explosive device (IED) while on foot patrol in the Baluchi Valley region of Uruzgan Province.
Defence says the digger is focused on recovering from his wounds and being with his family.
It said he suffered serious blast and fragmentation wounds when his joint Afghan National Army and MTF-2 patrol struck the IED.
He had previously been flown to Germany for treatment at a NATO hospital.



Australian soldiers in Afghanistan
TWO Australian soldiers have been shot and wounded in Afghanistan while troops were trying to secure an area around a roadside bomb.
The Australian Defence Force said the first Digger was wounded yesterday by “a single shot fired from an unknown location and direction”.
The second was shot a short time later while securing a landing zone for an aircraft to carry out a medical evacuation.
Defence said both soldiers were flown to the Australian base at Tarin Kowt, while one was subsequently moved to Kandahar for further treatment.
Both soldiers were in a satisfactory condition in separate hospitals.
“Medical staff will continue to monitor the soldiers' condition,” said Acting Chief of Joint Operations, Rear Admiral Ray Griggs.
Defence would not release any further details because operations were continuing.

Early last week an Australian soldier seriously wounded by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan was flown to Germany for specialist treatment.Sixty-four Australian soldiers have been wounded in Afghanistan this year, most by improvised explosive devices.
The unnamed soldier was one of two members of the Mentoring Task Force (MTF-2) hurt in separate improvised explosive device blasts in the Baluchi Valley region of Oruzgan province on December 20.
One of the soldiers received superficial wounds, but the other suffered serious blast and fragmentation wounds when the improvised explosive device exploded near an Afghan National Army foot patrol accompanied by Australian soldiers.
AAP
ADF LAV

Canadian Navy Recruiting Video

Canadian Navy Centennial Commercial

Navy to cut fleet in half

File:HMCS Saskatoon.jpg
HMCS Saskatoon

The Canadian Forces is having to cut half its patrol fleet as budget cuts slashed:
From an Official web site:
Kingston Class Patrol boats are used for:
"Coastal surveillance, general naval operations and exercises, search and rescue, law enforcement, resource protection, fisheries patrols and mine countermeasure capabilities."


A shortage of money and sailors is forcing Canada's navy to mothball half its fleet of 12 vessels used to patrol the Arctic, Atlantic and Pacific coasts.  In a statement to CBC News, the navy said it made the tough choice to leave several of the 55-metre vessels at dock in Halifax and Esquimalt, B.C., and strip them of their crews because it doesn't have the resources to operate them all.

The navy said the move is necessary to continue the primary mission of defending Canada.
"Upon close examination of resources and priorities, this was deemed necessary to safeguard and optimize our operational capability, both now and in the future," wrote Denise LaViolette, a navy spokeswoman.  Three ships will remain on each coast. The others won't be scrapped, but they will be put in long-term storage.


HMCS Brandon.jpg
HMCS Brandon (MM 710)
The navy has not said how much money it would need to keep the whole fleet active or how much it will save by reducing the fleet by half.  The Kingston-class ships were built in the mid-1990s to hunt for mines that could block Canadian ports. They are lightly armed and can be converted to carry a small underwater robot or even platoons of soldiers.  LaViolette said the federal government is providing "stable and predictable" funding, and the navy continues to modernize its frigates and refit its submarines.

No warning

Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter said he did not get any warning from Ottawa about the cuts — even though as the minister responsible for military relations, he is regularly briefed by Defence Department officials.
Dexter said he would have gladly helped Defence Minister Peter MacKay make the case for keeping the fleet intact.
"Minister MacKay would have my full support in making the case to the cabinet and the prime minister on the importance of naval operations — not just to this province, but to this country — and that anything that would lead to the paring down of operations would be of concern to us," the premier said.  Dexter plans to ask for details on this latest move by the military.
During question period in the House of Commons on Thursday, MacKay said the Conservative government has increased funding to the navy and will continue to do so.  


"The reality is, the navy is getting $200 million more in its budget," he said.
On top of that, MacKay said the government plans to spend $40 billion on new ships over the next 20 years.  Liberal MP Keith Martin, who represents Esquimalt, a navy town in British Columbia, said the news of the cuts shocked him, coming on the heels of sweeping government promises to increase military spending and rebuild the navy.  "Why is this government choosing to gut our navy and put the lives of our brave men and women at risk?" Martin asked.


MacKay replied the government is investing in the navy.  "We're investing in the Canadian Forces in unprecedented numbers," he said. "The Canadian navy, in its 100th anniversary, will have more money than it's had in a 100 years."
CF Budget as a percentage of GDP
But Vice-Admiral Dean McFadden, in a letter sent fleet-wide, said the navy had to make some tough financial decisions.  "As with any large organization, DND continuously monitors its financial status, evaluates its expenditures against actual results and, as required, sequences its priorities accordingly," the commander of Maritime Command, wrote.  "Managing funding and assigning priorities is part of our normal cycle of business. I have made choices to ensure programs key to the future of the Navy remain protected and that required force generation and force employment capabilities are sustained within the boundaries of national procurement resources allocated to the Navy."

'Slap in the face'

Government budget figures published by the department show that spending this year has actually gone down. Last year, Canada's Maritime Forces were allocated $2.1 billion; this year this was down to $1.97 billion, with a further reduction planned for the following year.  The NDP's shipbuilding critic, Peter Stoffer, called the cuts a "slap in the face" to the men and women in the navy.
He said the navy was forced to mothball its ships because of government cutbacks.  "The Conservative government should hang their head in shame," Stoffer said. "I really feel for all sailors and military personnel who will be affected by this decision."  He said the decision will have an impact on the economies of both Halifax and Victoria, as well as the ability to adequately patrol Canada's coasts.

Read more: 
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/nova-scotia/story/2010/05/13/ns-navy-coastal-ships.html#ixzz1CpH6r7wa



A report says the Canadian naval fleet will be cut in half. Defence Minister Peter MacKay denies the report.
Kingston Class Patrol Boat

This was something that was tried last year but the cuts were rescinded by higher command:

Defence Minister Peter MacKay is denying reports that the navy is cutting by half the fleet used to patrol all three coasts and limiting the number of frigate missions.
“These operational decisions have not been taken,” Mr. MacKay said yesterday in response to an Ottawa Citizen article was based on a letter from the navy’s commander detailing the cuts.
“We are going to have increased naval capability in the future as a result of the historic investments that we’re making in the Canadian navy."
Read more: http://www.nationalpost.com/news/MacKay+denies+navy+fleet+half/3025055/story.html#ixzz1CpNG9Uoo




Earlier this week, Vice-Admiral Dean McFadden, the head of Canada’s navy, ordered half of the country’s Kingston-class maritime coastal defence vessels to be docked and also shelved upgrades and maintenance on many other ships, including frigates.
He said he was forced to take such drastic action because he simply didn’t have enough funding.
Defence analysts called it a major reduction in the number of ships available for service, prompting howls from opposition MPs in the House of Commons -- and many sailors -- that the Conservatives, as their gift to the navy on its 100th anniversary, was essentially to starve it of the money needed to keep ships afloat.
But after two days of tough questions from the opposition in the House of Commons, Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Walter Natynczyk reversed Vice-Admiral McFadden’s decision, saying the Canadian Forces will re-allocate some financial resources so that Vice-Admiral McFadden and the navy won’t have to tie up a substantial portion of the fleet.
That sets up the possibility of a fierce turf war within the Canadian Forces as each service -- the navy, the army, and the air force -- tries to defend its existing budget allocations.
Gen. Natynczyk would not say if he was told to undo Vice-Admiral McFadden’s order by Defence Minister Peter MacKay.
“At the end of the day, in the military chain of command, it’s my decision to rescind the order,” Gen. Natynczyk told reporters at a Parliament Hill news conference Friday. “It’s my job to make sure the minister is not surprised.”
Hours earlier, Conservative MPLaurie Hawn, MacKay’s parliamentary secretary, angrily denied that Vice-Admiral McFadden had even issued such an order.
“No ships are going into dry dock. That is simply false,” Hawn told the House of Commons. “The navy has been given $200 million more this year than last.”
But even with that extra money, the navy -- like the other branches in the Canadian Forces -- is finding it tough to keep up.
The navy’s top two budget priorities are the modernization of the Halifax-class frigates and repairs to its Victoria-class submarines.
“We could always use more money,” Gen. Natynczyk said. But he also suggested that part of the reason for tying up some ships at dock -- what the navy calls “extended readiness” -- was due to a shortage of trained sailors.

David Akin, Canwest News Service · Thursday, May 13, 2010

Read more: 
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=3029312#ixzz1CpMULp61

Soldiers serving overseas to have benefits cut... a new dark decade?



"These are challenging times, but there has never been a better time to wear the uniform."
- General Walt Natynczyk, during his 24-25 January 2011 presentations to United Kingdom’s Royal United Services Institute and Royal College of Defence Studies.
In a good window of the future of the Canadian Forces and how they look to treat our serving men and women one need only look at the recent announcement made by Vice-Admiral Bruce Donaldson.

These kinds of budget cuts by blaming accounting errors or the Treasury Board is what we will see more in the future especially as the Vice Admiral will probably the next Chief of Defence Staff.  Telling bad news is a kind of  litmus tests to see how he would handle giving out bad news to the Canadian public and how he handles himself at news conferences.

The military is looking at releasing all the wounded that are unable to complete the fitness tests, even though there are many overweight or unfit people working at headquarters or throughout the various bases.  This is another cost saving measure to reduce the budgetary amounts that DND is paying to the wounded and injured. 
 It appears that treasury board is rearing its ugly head again and first it was VAC now the soldiers serving overseas......



The unauthorized benefits include:
- Next-of-kin visits to Afghanistan.
- Travel fee reimbursements for troops deployed to different parts of Canada.
- Bonuses for overseas postings and allowances for soldiers assigned away from families.
- Use of taxpayer dollars to bring families of fallen soldiers killed in Afghanistan to repatriation ceremonies.

"the Canadian Forces understand that deployments can be challenging for families, and have the resources in place to help.'"

DND halts millions in benefits

Misty Lyttle pays tribute to her brother, Sapper Steven Marshall, killed in Afghanistan in 2009, at the cenotaph in Kandahar Monday.
MEMORIAL Misty Lyttle pays tribute to her brother, Sapper Steven Marshall, killed in Afghanistan in 2009, at the cenotaph in Kandahar 0ct 2010

Jonathan Montpetit/THE CANADIAN PRESS





The Canadian military says an error at the Department of National Defence resulted in tens of millions of dollars worth of benefit payments paid to up to 7,000 service members over the last five years.
The benefits include the Defence Department's use of taxpayer dollars to bring families of fallen soldiers killed in Afghanistan to repatriation ceremonies, which did not receive proper approval from the Treasury Board.

The DND payments will be cut off at midnight Tuesday while the military reviews the benefit assessments and payment process, said Vice-Admiral Bruce Donaldson, vice-chief of the defence staff.
In a hastily arranged news conference at National Defence Headquarters in Ottawa, Donaldson said an internal review determined DND officials mistakenly changed internal eligibility policies for benefits offered to military posted outside Canada and their next of kin.  The unauthorized benefits also include next-of-kin visits to Afghanistan, travel fee reimbursements for troops deployed to different parts of Canada, bonuses for overseas postings and allowances for soldiers assigned away from families.

'We didn't do our homework'

Donaldson stressed the error was the result of an "interpretation" by military administrators over eligibility for payments, and servicemen and women who received the benefits did not do anything wrong.  "Canadian Forces members are not to be blamed for this oversight," Donaldson said. "We didn't do our homework."  The military is now seeking Treasury Board approval for these costs. In addition, the costs for any future next-of-kin visits will be paid out of a non-public fund.
Donaldson stressed Canadian servicemen and women will not see cuts on their paycheques, but acknowledged they will have to wait for future payments until the process is sorted out.
He added he believes it will have a minimal impact on soldiers currently deployed to Afghanistan.
"Every effort is being made to rectify this situation," Donaldson said.
So far, no one is facing disciplinary action, he added.

Jay Paxton, a spokesperson for Defence Minister Peter MacKay, said that while the minister's priority is to provide support to military members and their families, the payments must cease until they are approved by the Treasury Board.  "The [Canadian Forces] leadership have informed Minister MacKay these payments were made in good faith and that a process has been initiated to rectify the situation quickly and minimize any impact the cessation of payments may have on individual members of the Forces," he said.



Wednesday, February 2, 2011   CBC News



Lets encourage DND to do the right thing and bring back these benefits that cost so little in the great scheme of thing and stop penny pinching first the veterans and now the serving members.

Are we entering a new "dark decade'?



Sunday, January 30, 2011

As Egypt protestors fight for freedom is there a risk?

The Muslim Brotherhood that in effect spawned Al Qeada and the jihadist's attitudes may be using the current instability in Egypt to promote not freedom but instead theocracy.  What will happen in other areas...

Even the stable country of Jordan is a concern and the monarchy could be in trouble.




AMMAN, Jordan — The leader of Jordan's powerful Muslim Brotherhood warned Saturday that unrest in Egypt will spread across the Mideast and Arabs will topple leaders allied with the United States.
Hammam Saeed's comments were made at a protest outside the Egyptian Embassy in Amman, inspired by massive rallies in neighbouring Egypt demanding the downfall of the country's longtime president, Hosni Mubarak.
About 100 members of the fundamentalist group and activists from other leftist organizations and trade unions chanted "Mubarak, step down" and "the decision is made, the people's revolt will remain."
Elsewhere, a separate group of 300 protesters gathered in front of the office of Jordanian Prime Minister Samir Rifai, demanding his ouster. "Rifai, it's time for you to go," chanted the group.
Jordan's protests have been relatively small in size, but they underline a rising tension with Jordan's King Abdullah II, a key U.S. ally who has been making promises of reform in recent days in an apparent attempt to quell domestic discontent over economic degradation and lack of political freedoms.
But as a monarch with deep support from the Bedouin-dominated military, Jordan's ruler is not seen as vulnerable as Mubarak or Tunisia's deposed leader. Even the Brotherhood — a fiery critic of Jordan's moderate government — has remained largely loyal to the king, who claims ancestry to Islam's Prophet Muhammad.
Many believe it's unlikely King Abdullah will bow to demands for popular election of the prime minister and Cabinet officials, traditionally appointed by the king.
Saeed said Arabs have grown disgruntled with U.S. domination of their oil wealth, military occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan and its support for "totalitarian" leaders in the region.
"The Americans and (President Barack) Obama must be losing sleep over the popular revolt in Egypt," he said. "Now, Obama must understand that the people have woken up and are ready to unseat the tyrant leaders who remained in power because of U.S. backing."
Saeed did not specifically name King Abdullah. But he said Jordan's prime minister "must draw lessons from Tunisia and Egypt and must swiftly implement political reforms."
"We tell the Americans 'enough is enough'," he said.
Rifai has in the last two weeks announced a $550 million package of new subsidies for fuel and staple products like rice, sugar, livestock and liquefied gas used for heating and cooking. It includes a raise for civil servants and security personnel.
Still, Jordan's economy struggles, weighed down by a record deficit of $2 billion this year, rising inflation and rampant unemployment and poverty.
Jamal Halaby 
Jordanian protests

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Battle Tested Medicine Legion article


Great article on Tactical medicine and the combat hospitals in kandahar

HEALTH & LIFESTYLE

Battle-Tested Medicine

July 28, 2008, by Sharon Adams

Dr. Allan Hawryluk was dreading the difficult hours ahead—his patient was on blood thinners, and bleeding uncontrollably following a tooth extraction. The Mississauga dentist knew it could be hours before the bleeding was brought under control with sutures and chemical compounds.
Then he tried a sample of the new HemCon dental dressing. “The bleeding stopped completely and immediately,” he said. “I just didn’t believe it.” In the year since he first used it he has gone on to use the new dressing to stop bleeding in the mouth of a National Hockey League player who “was able to return to fight in the third period.” He now keeps HemCon in supply for the “impossible cases” he comes across in his practice.
Since its introduction about a year ago, increasing numbers of dental patients across Canada are benefiting from this new dressing, made from chitosan, which is derived from shrimp cells. They have no idea the product was initially developed to control bleeding of wounded soldiers. It’s just one of hundreds of advances and innovations made or perfected for treatment of the wounded in battle that make their way into civilian health care. “Sometimes the only useful salvage of war is the medical knowledge gained,” says the entry on the dust jacket of the Official History of the Canadian Medical Services, 1939-1945, Vol. II. This has been true throughout human history.
“Advances in frontline external bleeding control are significant,” says Colonel Ron Brisebois, in an e-mail interview from Afghanistan. He mentions other advances—better tourniquets and supplies like HemCon bandages, the concept of damage control resuscitation, and relearning the value of transfusing trauma patients with whole blood.
Canadian and Dutch surgeons prepare a patient for abdominal surgery. [SGT. GERBEN VAN ES, TASK FORCE AFGHANISTAN ROTO 1]
SGT. GERBEN VAN ES, TASK FORCE AFGHANISTAN ROTO 1
Canadian and Dutch surgeons prepare a patient for abdominal surgery.
Even more important, he says, is the knowledge that is passed from those who use it on the battlefield to civilian health care professionals battling on the front lines of domestic trauma and tragedy. Brisebois is also assistant professor of surgery and critical care at the University of Alberta in Edmonton.
Experience in Kandahar is also teaching Canadian military and civilian health care professionals how to deliver better service with limited resources and time, lessons they can use in dealing with Canada’s own beleaguered health care system, says Major Vivian McAlister, professor of surgery at the University of Western Ontario.
During a two-month posting to Afghanistan in the summer of 2007, McAlister saw that civilian and military medical personnel found ways to “expedite care and do terrific rehabilitation” for wounded civilians unlikely to get followup treatment once they left the Canadian-run NATO hospital in Kandahar. For instance, using traction for fractures “takes too long for patients to recover, and they have complications.” Using internal fixation techniques, “you can get a patient up and mobile more quickly and with fewer complications.” Now, he says, orthopedic surgeons are using these techniques in Canada.
As well, battlefield necessity introduced Canadians to a new class of medical professional—the Physician Assistant—that could be adopted in the civilian medical system to ease the service crunch resulting from a shortage of medical professionals and of health care dollars. PAs “replace the general duty doctors taking care of general illnesses in the sick parade,” says McAlister, “and they’re also in the front line doing primary resuscitation of casualties, again replacing general duty doctors.”
There are about 140 of these professionals now in Canadian military service, and as they return to the civilian world, along with doctors and nurses who worked alongside them, there will be a “natural evolution” to incorporate them into the civilian system, says McAlister. That evolution has already happened in the U.S., where about 70,000 PAs have been trained and certified since the 1960s. Manitoba has used ex-military or American-trained PAs since 2002. Two Canadian universities will offer new PA programs in the fall, and Ontario is now running pilot projects. In the civilian world, PAs, who work under doctors’ supervision, can handle a wide variety of tasks, and help stretch resources.
Other military medical advances now benefiting civilians include new surgical and trauma care techniques that improve chances of surviving severe injuries; prosthetics that operate more like real limbs (Thinking Bionics, May/June); new methods for storing blood and blood products; a plethora of new medical devices, like miniaturized respirators; and supplies, like HemCon dressings.
A ship’s casualty is prepared for rapid transfer. [CPL. M.D. SELIG, HMCS FREDERICTON]
CPL. M.D. SELIG, HMCS FREDERICTON
A ship’s casualty is prepared for rapid transfer
Damage control surgery, a technique perfected on the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan, is being used by Dr. Jay Doucet, now retired from his 23-year career with the Canadian Forces.
In September 2006, Lt.-Col. Doucet was deployed in Afghanistan during Operation Medusa, the largest NATO operation in the war-torn country since 2002. The objective was to destroy the hundreds of well-armed insurgents who had gathered southwest of Kandahar city, in the district of Panjwai.
“I’d treated about 50 guys in a row with pretty bad injuries,” says Doucet. About a dozen had been killed over the summer and the early September operation started adding to the number of casualties, which would climb about a dozen more by the end of October. This was his third posting to Afghanistan, and his sixth deployment. He’d seen a lot of traumatic injuries, a lot of death.
“After awhile,” he says, “you hope there’s something good that can come out of all this.” It has. He’s now a surgeon at the University of California San Diego Trauma Division, using damage control surgery techniques learned on the battlefield to save lives of accident victims.
Civilian victims of trauma perhaps benefit most from the knowledge and experience that passes quickly and continuously from the military medical community into the civilian world. Trauma is the chief cause of death of young soldiers in battle and for adults under age 45 throughout North America.
Damage-control surgery saves lives of some accident victims that come to the San Diego trauma centre from neighbouring Imperial County, about 250 kilometres to the east. “They get spectacular trauma because people drive at crazy speeds,” over the flat valley land, explains Doucet.
In earlier conflicts, surgeons close to the battlefield took care of injured soldiers until they were stable enough to be shipped back home. “They came back home as passengers,” adds Doucet. “Now patients are coming all the way from Afghanistan or Iraq still in intensive care.”
Current conflicts have taught doctors “we can extend surgery forward (closer to the battlefield) and we can extend intensive care backwards,” says Doucet,
Damage-control surgery involves handling immediate life-threatening injuries, then sending the patient on to the next level of care—often without even closing the woun d—where another surgeon takes over. When U.S. casualties arrive at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., a week or so after injury, some “have travelled 8,000 miles (nearly 13,000 km) and had four operations,” says Colonel Craig Shriver, head of general surgery.
Current conflicts have taught doctors “we can extend surgery forward (closer to the battlefield) and we can extend intensive care backwards,” says Doucet, a concept he shares with civilian colleagues.“ I can tell the surgeon to ‘just get in there, find out what’s wrong, fix what needs to be done immediately, then pack the patient up. I don’t care if you even close the skin; just put a sticky drape over everything, put him on a helicopter and get him to us.’ We know from our experience in Iraq and Afghanistan it’s going to be OK.”
Medical staff load a Canadian soldier into a helicopter. [CANADIAN FORCES COMBAT CAMERA]
CANADIAN FORCES COMBAT CAMERA
Medical staff load a Canadian soldier into a helicopter.
Methods used to deal with severe abdominal trauma similar to life-threatening wounds caused by shrapnel, are also changing. One example is the way abdominal swelling is dealt with. “The old approach was to put a big skin graft over the internal organs and have the patient come back one to two years later,” explains Shriver. Unfortunately, the lax skin did not offer good support for internal organs and common complications included fistulas, which allow intestinal contents to leak out into the abdomen. In other cases it led to huge hernias that prevents certain movements like lifting or straining—even rehabilitation exercises.
A two-year recovery period and interference with rehabilitation was not acceptable to the military, which wants to treat troops quickly and effectively. “We decided to go to a new approach,” Shriver adds. And so techniques grew from a battlefield necessity. Severe abdominal injuries couldn’t be closed at the battlefield, so a plastic sheet was laid over the abdomen and patients were sent on to the next level of care, then the next. They’d arrive in Walter Reed with a plastic sheet over a now severely swollen abdomen.
Shriver had seen patients die from intra-abdominal hypertension, where blood pressure drops as the abdomen swells. Recognizing “the swelling will eventually go down,” he developed a new method, called serial abdominal closure, for dealing with these terrible wounds. The damage to the internal organs is repaired, and then sealed with Gortex mesh until the swelling goes down. The mesh, which does not attach to the internal organs, is gradually trimmed as the swelling decreases until finally the wound can be closed—without a huge skin graft. “I did that with a dozen patients and the outcome was definitely better.” Troops could begin rehabilitation for other injuries with the risk of fistula and hernia problems nearly eliminated.
Civilian surgeons, however, were not quick to adopt the procedure. The initial criticism was expense—the large Gortex sheets cost between $6,000 and $10,000. But quickly it was recognized as a cost-cutting procedure, for it eliminated subsequent surgeries for hernia and fistula repair. “If you get one patient with intestinal fistula the cost could easily go into the $100,000 range, even if you can successfully control it.” Now serial abdominal closure is used by civilian surgeons, too.
Dr. Vivian McAlister (centre) sutures a head wound, aided by Dutch colleagues. [PHOTO: MASTER CPL. KEVIN PAUL]
PHOTO: MASTER CPL. KEVIN PAUL
Dr. Vivian McAlister (centre) sutures a head wound, aided by Dutch colleagues.
Civilian trauma experts are also benefiting from battlefield advances in the use of blood products as well as blood replacement techniques. For years, civilian blood services have separated whole donated blood into its various products with the idea that supplies will stretch farther if each patient gets only the blood product they need. For example, oxygen-carrying red blood cells are used in surgery and to treat injuries to prevent organs or limbs dying from lack of oxygen; platelets are used to control bleeding for cancer patients; plasma restores fluid volume in shock patients and provides clotting proteins to stop bleeding.
But blood products cannot be stored for long—red blood cells last about 40 days, plasma can be frozen for up to a year, platelets need to be used within five days, hence the need for blood donations and blood banks. When big battles with lots of injuries use up battlefield blood stores, field hospitals turn to their ‘walking blood banks’—volunteers on site—for donations of whole blood for transfusion.
Field hospital surgeons noted that trauma patients given transfusions of whole blood did better, so they started using more whole blood when they could get it, and they also increased the ratio of plasma to red cells. “In civilian medicine one unit of plasma for every five to 10 units of red cells is thought to be good for the typical situation in surgery,” says Doucet. “But trauma is different,” and can call for a one-to-one ratio. Civilian trauma specialists now commonly use this regime, too, he says.
The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is trying to ensure field hospitals never run out of blood and blood products. It’s developed a freeze-drying method, now in clinical trials, to extend the shelf life of platelets from days to two years, “and we’re trying to get it up to five,” says Col. Geoffrey Ling, a DARPA project manager and critical care physician at Walter Reed. Although it will be a boon to soldiers in the field, “the biggest application I see as a doctor is for cancer patients.”
Another battlefield practice now being tested for civilian use is administration of hypertonic saline to trauma victims, says Dr. David Evans, medical director of trauma services at Vancouver General Hospital, who volunteered for a month-long tour in Afghanistan in January this year.
To keep oxygen circulating to organs, fluid levels must be increased quickly after massive blood loss. Because there’s no time to figure out blood types on the battlefield or at the scene of an accident, a saline solution about as salty as blood is administered. Since battlefield medics have to carry their supplies with them, the solution was concentrated. This hypertonic saline is “a quarter of the size and four times as strong,” says Evans. This battlefield innovation turned out to have other advantages. One problem with regular saline solution is that it seeps out of blood vessels, leaving only about a quarter of the volume in the bloodstream. Hypertonic saline is so salty it draws fluids from other tissue into the bloodstream, boosting volume by about four times over the amount of solution administered. Hypertonic saline may also reduce the “inflammation cascade” that sometimes kills days later, says Evans. As well, there’s evidence it may limit swelling of the brain in response to head injuries, thus reducing brain damage and deaths due to head trauma.
A major international trial of hypertonic saline is now being conducted in about a dozen centres throughout North America, including three in Canada, in partnership with the U.S. National Institutes of Health, but “hypertonic saline is now used quite ubiquitously,” in civilian practice, says Evans.
Dr. Daniel Lindsay, medical director of diagnostic imaging at Selkirk and District General Hospital in Selkirk, Man., has brought back to his civilian practice experience with a pain relief technique—continuous peripheral nerve block—used to treat troops wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. Anesthetics are administered through a tiny catheter inserted next to nerves serving the wounded area, blocking pain signals before they can be transmitted to the brain. This is a huge cost saving because general anesthesia must be constantly monitored by a trained specialist since it suppresses central nervous system activity. Also, when it wears off, patients need large doses of narcotics for pain control, and they don’t always work, requiring even more specialized care.
“We used ultrasound to go down the sciatic nerve (which runs through the buttocks and down the back of the leg) to insert the catheter to diminish pain for people with amputations,” says Lindsay. “Otherwise they would be on morphine and in brain fog. Instead, they’re sitting up in the morning having breakfast. It’s a huge difference.”
A new technique for handling phantom pain—the sometimes quite severe pain perceived by amputees—has been developed by navy neurologist Dr. Jack Tsao of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Md. Patients watch movement of their whole limbs in mirrors positioned where their missing limb used to be. The illusion of two legs moving together somehow tricks the brain into overriding the mismatched nerve signals causing the pain, says Dr. Larry Laughlin, dean of USU. “Some sort of an adjustment is happening in the brain, something both simple and sophisticated at the same time.” Now that it’s been shown to work, researchers are searching to explain how and why it works, and whether it can be adapted for pain relief of other conditions, too.
But perhaps the biggest contributions from battlefield medicine come from simply experiencing it, as Canadian civilian medical professionals do when they volunteer as military reservists or civilian contractors with the Canadian Forces. Many answered the call to serve brief tours to help the forces cope with a shortfall in medical professionals. They come up against situations in the field that they rarely see at home, and bring that new knowledge back with them.
In the field Evans saw “multi-dimensional trauma,” from victims of IEDs (improvised explosive devices) who suffered burns, penetration of shrapnel, blunt force injuries, chemical exposure—all at once. “We never see that here,” in the trauma unit of Vancouver General Hospital, where blunt trauma from car accidents and falls form the majority of his cases. And it’s rare for personnel in Canadian trauma centres to deal with a large number of victims from a single event, but it’s a common experience in a field hospital after a battle, a bomb attack or IED explosion.
But such skills are needed by Canadian health professionals should they ever have to deal with victims of a large-scale natural disaster, like an earthquake, major freeway accident or terrorist attack. “We prepare for it, model it with actors, do simulations,” says Evans. “But we don’t have the experience of managing it on a moment’s notice.”
A suicide bomber will result in 30 or 40 people “hitting the door” (arriving at the field hospital) all at once, says Lindsay. “That in and of itself is something we’re not confronted with here.”
Military experience “really has improved my skill at triage,” adds Lindsay, who was due to return in June from his fifth posting to Afghanistan since December of 2006. “I had to decide who gets what technology and how it’s delivered.”
In disasters, “too often enormous resources are wasted on a tragic circumstance where a casualty is really beyond the help you can offer at the moment. You need to focus what you have on the casualties that will benefit the most,” says Laughlin. In triage, casualties are divided into three categories. Those with severe injuries who require highly sophisticated care that is not available are “in the category we probably cannot help”; the walking wounded “need medical attention, but not immediately”; and “the critical category: patients severely injured and we have the equipment in place to make them better. You want to focus all available resources on patients that will get the greatest benefit out of it,” he explains.
“Dealing with multiple casualties is experience I have now,” says Dr. Steven Wheeler, an anesthesiologist with the Calgary Health Region, based in Calgary’s Peter Lougheed Hospital. “I’ll be able to use it if there’s an unfortunate situation where disaster strikes.”
When asked about important lessons brought back to Canada from their service in the field, Evans, Wheeler and Lindsay all mentioned the opportunity to work shoulder-to-shoulder with a variety of highly skilled specialists on the same cases. “If one person doesn’t have it within his or her experience, some one else will,” and is willing to share that knowledge, says Evans.
There’s a professional commitment to sharing and preserving the knowledge gained in battlefield medicine.
“I think it’s fair to say there are many discoveries that are made on the battlefield itself,” adds Dr. Richard Satava, professor of surgery at the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle. “Frequently they were work-arounds, or they were things that were thought about previously but either the civilian world couldn’t figure out how to do it, or thought it shouldn’t be done.”
“As we entered and exited many wars, we’ve learned we start out not being very good at military medicine, get very good at it, and by the end of the war have made many advances useful to operations. And then we disband and go home,” says Laughlin. Established in 1972, USU has trained more than a quarter of current U.S. physicians on active duty and is a world-renowned centre of excellence for research. It’s the “memory bank for military medicine,” he says, ensuring the hard-gained knowledge not only isn’t lost before it’s needed again, but continues to be developed through research that very often ends up helping not only military personnel, but civilians.
In other words, knowledge passed on through training and built upon by research is a permanent ‘salvage of war’.
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