

Prolonged Field Care Podcast
Dennis
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This podcast and website is dedicated to the healthcare professional who needs to provide high quality care in a very austere location.
For more content: www.prolongedfieldcare.org
Consider supporting us on: patreon.com/ProlongedFieldCareCollective
This podcast and website is dedicated to the healthcare professional who needs to provide high quality care in a very austere location.
For more content: www.prolongedfieldcare.org
Consider supporting us on: patreon.com/ProlongedFieldCareCollective
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jul 8, 2021 • 18min
Prolonged Field Care Podcast 23: JTS Clinical Practice Guidelines For The SOF Medic
What is the process that the CPGs go through before publication?
Medics identify what guidelines are needed.
A team consisting of a medic, unit surgeon and specialist in the field begin a draft.
Additional authors, specialists and SMEs are added as identified
Progress is monitored by the Prolonged Field Care Working Group Steering Committee and advisors from the Joint Trauma System. Final draft sent out to interested parties, other specialists and PFC working group members for review
Published in the Journal of Special Operations Medicine(JSOM) with proprietary format
Formatted for public release via the JTS website
Presented as a Thursday morning JTS CME Conference Talk.
Posted on prolongedfieldcare.org
Interviews with authors are published as podcasts.
Primary and Co-Authors may write additional thoughts as a blog post.
Polldaddy quizzes may be included in the posts or separately.
Released and promoted through social media such as our Facebook Pages, Instagram and Twitter feeds.
Why not just update the Tactical Medical Emergency Protocols? We wanted peer reviewed guidelines that could be updated individually as needed. Independent medical providers can now see what studies were referenced per recommendation. We have partnered with USSOCOM and advised several changes and additions to the TMEPs. The CPGs will help guide the CEB as they update future additions of the TMEPS as a reference. What are the origins of the CPGs? Sharing lessons learned and best practices accross the theaters of war Why are there CPGs specific to Prolonged Field Care and Critical Care Evacuation Teams(CCAT) in addition to the main JTS CPGs? There are large enough differences in levels of training, equipment and medications available and general logistics involved that make providing an identical care in all environments impossible. The CPGs take into consideration the unique challenges of the operational environment so the the provider is presented with several best options for the unique issues presented with each etiology and environment. What CPGs are in the works and when can we expect to see them published?

Jul 8, 2021 • 52min
Prolonged Field Care Podcast 22: On Blood, Geir Strandenes At SOMSA 2017
Are you familiar with the concept of oxygen debt or oxygen deficit? What constitutes a “dose” of shock? What systolic BP constitutes hypotension on the battlefield? Where did the concept of permissive hypotension come from? Is it still valid? How long can fresh whole blood last?
Blood Transfusions were a huge topic at this year’s meeting in Charlotte with no less than 3 major speakers giving multiple talks on the subject. This talk was recorded during the Prolonged Field Care Pre-Conference Lab during the Special Operations Medicine and Scientific Assembly (SOMSA).
Dr. Geir Strandenes is a founding member of the THOR (Tactical Hemostasis, Oxygenation, and Resuscitation) Group, the Senior Medical Officer of the Norwegian Naval Special Operations, and a Researcher in the Department of Immunology and Transfusion Medicine at Haukeland University Hospital in Bergen, Norway. He has worked hand-in-hand with the U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research and the US Armed Forces Blood Program. You can read more about his research and other articles at www.RDCR.org. Our PFC working group has always gone to the THOR network with any blood questions that we have, as they usually have an answer or best practice already established. I have included a link to the THOR/RDCR.org publication page below along with other notable publications which he helped to author such as the recently published JTS ISR Clinical Practice Guideline on Damage Control Resuscitation and the Frequently Asked Questions we sent to Geir and the THOR network over the last couple years. www.prolongedfieldcare.org

Jul 8, 2021 • 30min
Prolonged Field Care Podcast 21: Optimizing Traumatic Ventilations
Prolonged Field Care is back with a new episode on a long awaited topic, traumatic ventilation. We were finally able to corner a real, live anesthesiologist who was actually more than happy to sit down and talk about ventilation after his years of experience working at the heads of thousands of patients. This episode starts right off with a difficult scenario discussion that includes a hypovolemic patient with a GSW to the pelvis, RR 35 As they work to get the patient stabilized, Dr. Kopp recommends an end tidal CO2 Capnograph as the single best patient monitor for this situation. A SAVE2 vent is discussed along with the ARDSnet recommendations for a lung protective vent strategy including the preferred tidal volume of 6-8ml/kg of ideal bodyweight based on patient height. This is to reduce barotrauma and over-ventilation that can lead to other problems. This begins with attempting to match the patients physiologic respiratory rate to prevent acidosis by giving too few breaths. The beginning Positive End Expiration Pressure (PEEP) recommendation should start somewhere around 5 to keep alveoli open and recruited, prior to increasing oxygen levels if available. PIP or Peak Inspiratory Pressure or the maximum pressure of each breath which has a default setting of 30 corresponding with the ARDSnet protocol. For an uninjured patient in the Operating Room, Dr. Kopp would start at 20-22 and then titrate from there. While we are working on an Airway Clinical Practice Guideline with the Joint Trauma System and Army Institute of Surgical Research, this will go along with our earlier posted PFC WG Airway recommendations (April, 14) until we can get a consensus on the CPG and get it published.
www.prolongedfieldcare.org

Jul 8, 2021 • 39min
Prolonged Field Care Podcast 20: TBI Round Table And Case Discussion
This podcast is a follow up from our last post on managing traumatic brain injuries in austere environments. We included a scenario discussion with David, Jamie, Daryl, Jay, Doug and I with much needed answers to some frequently asked questions. What are your priorities? How do you assess in the field without labs and imagery? Do you include severe TBI injuries in your trauma training? What if he also has a pelvis injury or internal bleeding? When do you take the airway, if at all? When do you provide positive pressure ventilation in these patients? Can it be dangerous?
www.prolongedfieldcare.org

Jul 7, 2021 • 33min
Prolonged Field Care Podcast 19: Infection, Sirs And Sepsis
If you sit on a patient long enough, infection has a greater chance of taking hold and progressing to sepsis, or you may receive a patient who has already been sick for days. Doc Jabon Ellis walks us through the full spectrum from infection and SIRS to sepsis, shock and death. Despite firm CoTCCC and ICRC recommendations for early antibiotics, in the past we may have foregone that luxury because of lighting fast evacuation times, maybe even thinking, ‘they’ll take care of it at the next echelon.’ A great medic should not only treat their patient but set them up for success at the next echelon, as sepsis is a testament to how poor care during the TCCC phases of care can cost our patients days and weeks in a hospital later. But what if you are your own next echelon? Point of injury to Role 1+ could be your own team house or single litter aid station. Go down the checklist on the right side of the PFC trending chart and make sure you are taking care of anything that could result in an infection. Have you given those antibiotics? How is your airway and respiratory care? Did you replace any dirty IV or IO sites you placed in the field? Are you doing all your procedures an as aseptic manner as much as possible? When will you debride? Are you doing everything you can to prevent pressure ulcers? When will you call for a telemedical consult? When your patient develops a fever? Blood pressure falling? Altered mental status? Do you know how to dilute your 1:1000 epinephrine to use as a push dose pressor? (It’s in the Tactical Medical Emergency Protocols) Is an Epi drip approriate, why or why not? How much fluid will you give to help prop up that BP? All questions that the medic prepared for PFC should be looking to answer. For more content, visit www.prolongedfieldcare.org

Jul 7, 2021 • 52min
Prolonged Fieldcare Podcast 18: TBI Management in the Prolonged Fieldcare Environment
We want you to be able to have more knowledge on this topic and more confidently be able to answer these questions and plan for it, as well as implement this into your training for hands on and trauma patient assessment skills. Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is physical damage to the brain caused by a blow to the head, penetrating objects, motor vehicles crashes and explosions, or a combination of these, which are all familiar scenarios we encounter in our community. This is especially true for Motor Vehicle Crash, the number one cause of death of our Operators on peacetime deployments, and still 5% of deaths even in warzones. To make matters worse, the force that caused the TBI also created other injuries such as a hemothorax, making it even more of an animal to treat. It’s more difficult to understand what is going on because there isn’t an artery spurting blood we can address, so we have to put on our thinking caps and understand what is going on at the cellular level.
For more content, visit www.prolongedfieldcare.org

May 31, 2021 • 14min
Prolonged Field Care Podcast 17: Expectant Patients And Palliative Care
Despite our best efforts, endless training, and reading, some of our patients will die. This has been a taboo subject that is difficult to broach in the best of times. We aim to start a conversation here with the hope that it continues with your Medical Director, PA, Surgeon and fellow Medics before you are ever faced with this difficult situation out on your own. Often prolonged field care involves treating the most critically sick or injured patients longer than you expect to. Inevitably some of these “sickest-of-the-sick” will not make it to see definitive care and you will be left to ease the suffering during end of life care alone. While you may have to deliver end of life care by yourself, you may not have to make all the decisions alone. In this episode Dennis and Doc Powell discuss how to treat expectant patients. This could be as part of a multi-patient MASCAL or a happen to a single patient who is critically ill or injured. If it happens during a MASCAL, once you are done treating your urgent patients, what do you do when you go back to your expectant patients? It’s common to skip over discussing and training on losing patients… Taboo even. The fact is that it will eventually happen to some of us; No matter how good of a medic we are, patients will die. Doc Powell has spent innumerable hours in Intensive Care Units with the best and brightest medical teams a patient could hope for. Even in this setting the top notch care, medicines and interventions are not enough and patients code and die. This is part of medicine whether we talk about it openly or not and while many of these situations will be complicated and stressful we hope to give you a few tools to help manage the situation in a more professional manner. How do you decide if your critically ill patients are expectant, when alone in a tactical or resource strained environment? After that decision is made, what can we still do? How is telemedicine different for curative vs. palliative cases, if at all? For more content, visit www.prolongedfieldcare.org

May 31, 2021 • 38min
Prolonged Fieldcare Podcast 16: Sedation in Prolonged Fieldcare
The podcast explores sedation in prolonged fieldcare situations, discussing the importance of patient comfort and safety. It covers determining the need for sedation, medications for sedation and analgesia, managing unarousable patients and overdoses, and details about sedation medications and administration methods.


