BATDOK -- Medics monitoring and treating multiple Pts in the field

  • Thread starter Thread starter berkeman
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Field Multiple
AI Thread Summary
Engineers from the 711th Human Performance Wing at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base are developing wearable wireless vital signs monitors for Air Force pararescue jumpers. This technology allows medics to monitor multiple wounded service members simultaneously, providing real-time data on vital signs through sensors placed on the patients. The system is designed to enhance triage procedures during mass casualty incidents, enabling medics to respond quickly to critical changes, such as a drop in heart rate. However, there is skepticism about the practicality of performing chest compressions in battlefield conditions, as this is not typically done in most mass casualty situations. The discussion highlights the potential for this technology to revolutionize emergency medical response in combat scenarios.
berkeman
Admin
Messages
69,154
Reaction score
24,161
http://www.emsworld.com/news/121512...ap&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=CPS151212005

Nice new development using technology...

FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AFNS) -- Imagine a future battlefield where an Air Force pararescue jumper treats seven wounded service members at once. He places sensors on their chests, arms and fingers, which immediately feed vital signs to a small wireless computer, no bigger than a cell phone, on his forearm.

As he checks out the fifth person, his computer vibrates. He looks at the computer screen: the second person’s heart rate is dropping. The pararescueman moves back to the second person and performs chest compressions, saving their life.

That future is not far off. Engineers with the 711th Human Performance Wing from the Human Effectiveness Directorate at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, are working on exactly this kind of wearable technology to assist medics in the field.
I wonder if this will become a standard triage procedure in mass casualty incidents -- placing the sensors on Pts as you move among them doing your RPM assessments... :smile:
 
  • Like
Likes atyy
Biology news on Phys.org
But performing chest compressions in the (battle)field?
 
atyy said:
But performing chest compressions in the (battle)field?
Yeah, I wondered about that as well. You certainly don't do chest compressions in most MCIs...
 
https://www.nhs.uk/mental-health/conditions/body-dysmorphia/ Most people have some mild apprehension about their body, such as one thinks their nose is too big, hair too straight or curvy. At the extreme, cases such as this, are difficult to completely understand. https://www.msn.com/en-ca/health/other/why-would-someone-want-to-amputate-healthy-limbs/ar-AA1MrQK7?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=68ce4014b1fe4953b0b4bd22ef471ab9&ei=78 they feel like they're an amputee in the body of a regular person "For...
Thread 'Did they discover another descendant of homo erectus?'
The study provides critical new insights into the African Humid Period, a time between 14,500 and 5,000 years ago when the Sahara desert was a green savanna, rich in water bodies that facilitated human habitation and the spread of pastoralism. Later aridification turned this region into the world's largest desert. Due to the extreme aridity of the region today, DNA preservation is poor, making this pioneering ancient DNA study all the more significant. Genomic analyses reveal that the...
Whenever these opiods are mentioned they usually mention that e.g. fentanyl is "50 times stronger than heroin" and "100 times stronger than morphine". Now it's nitazene which the public is told is everything from "much stronger than heroin" and "200 times stronger than fentany"! Do these numbers make sense at all? How do they arrive at them? Kill thousands of mice? En passant: nitazene have already been found in both Oxycontin pills and in street "heroin" here, so Naloxone is more...

Similar threads

Replies
7
Views
5K
Replies
13
Views
3K
Replies
1
Views
10K
Replies
5
Views
4K
Back
Top