RaginMedic23
Discord ID: 705214820017766432
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Hey y'all
I'm glad to see some effort to improve the pamphlet
I am good.
Is this a safe place to share the intended mission set that was passed to me with it? I was the one who shared it in the Intel group a couple days ago I believe
It's a multiphase approach and a state needs to take the initiative
Omw
@TonyB talking a propaganda approach
When the pamphlet has been produced to it's final draft though
Truth. It's going to remain a clusterfuck if we don't get our heads right and square some shit away
Not trying to be rude, but it's time for a vibe check. Some of y'all are ex military, I know I am, get your shit right and act like it.
It isn't political though
I'm not trying to start a fight
This movement has stagnated because of the approach the community has taken
There's just a lot of infighting and "rah rah this and that is stupid" and just a lot of dissenting to people trying to,take some initiative is all
I had to have my gripe
But regardless, there is some good heads taking some initiative, which is what we need
Y'all wanna hear what I have to share in regards to the PR approach though? None of it is illegal and @TonyB told me to move it this way
Howdy y'all
This be my place lol
And superglue yes
Stop the bleeding first. If the wound is actively bleeding you can't do shit. Pressure! Pressure! Pressure!
If the bleeding is controlled and suture material is not availability, pour all the crazy glue you can in that go and push the flesh together
*available *ho
If the bleeding is by any means hemorrhagic, PACK THAT SHIT WITH HEMOSTATIC GAUZE
Every second of hemorrhagic bleeding is a diminished chance of survival after prehospital care
Super glue is for superficial wounds that need help, just like sutures.
You can do all the correct interventions and be dummy slow at it and your patient will still die because of the lowered chance of survival from traumatic injuries
Yes. I was taught arterial bleeding as traumatic hemorrhage
I have not
I was a combat medic in the army and am trained on TC3, prolonged field care, field sanitation, disease prevention, fluid resuscitation and some invase interventions as well as pharmacology
68W who was blessed enough to sit through some whiskey one training and also held the role of utilizing higher levels of care in the field. Had a good PA and spent all my time on the line with both army and the marines
I see a lot of conversation in here about emergency medical but not a whole lot about what happens after the X, so it is my duty to introduce it to y'all. Since it's a broad topic, I'll start simply with the next thing, evacuation
> Well, yes, after CUF and TFC is EVC, but during the situation that we may find ourselves in, EVAC will be few and far between.
@[LA] Zoomer Medi/k/ I have to disagree with you there. There is TACEVAC and CASEVAC
We'll most likely use TACEVAC. The difference between the two is that CASEVAC is a standard medical platform and TACEVAC is anything that moves
Any scenario we find ourselves in that requires the utilization of TC3 should also include immediately breaking contact. Because of that, like you said, evac sops need to be established as well as a well planned evac route
You have 15 minutes to engage and gtfo anyway. Shoot and scoot
Hospitals and the feds will work together
The feds plan to ignore Geneva con as well
Facts to surgical
> Initially taking a care point and command would be important. I cant take any of this seriously unless there's a full thought plan.
@Thorne no, you are right. Sorry everyone else but he is absolutely right
Y'all keep only thinking combat injuries but
Half of y'all wouldn't even live through the summer
Pest borne diseases
> E. Coli
@Catman yes
Water and food contanimation
I'm taking the initiative to start a prolonged field care and disease prevention thread. You're no good at any level if you're ridden with disease and your feet are fucked up lol
Faacctss
Also permethrin and appropriate field wear
Ooofff
Hey all, on the subject, let's talk about medical emergencies. Not every medical emergency requires hospitalization and in the field many can even be stabilized. Does anybody have any prior knowledge on this subject?
Facts. I'm going to pitch adding a new channel. But the information comes from links with credible sources only
AMEDD, JEMS, ETC
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