Get Started Here  

The following should be viewed like a checklist to help jump start any tactical medical program to accommodate prolonged field care situations. Most of these concepts are discussed in separate posts and papers but are compiled here specifically to address questions on how to start from scratch. Special equipment acquisition should only be considered after identifying gaps in training, planning and practice. While there are still some gaps which we are working to fill, I hope some of this helps.


Deployment Download Post


  • 1. Change the way you think about evacuation times to expect that the patient will be with a single medic for 24-72 hours. This means that every training scenario or lane should have some prolonged field care issues addressed.

Special Warfare Magazine with our “Loss of the Golden Hour” Article March 2017

Podcast Episode 1: Why Prolonged Field Care

Principals for Practicing Effective Prolonged Field Care

  • 2. Read the clinical practice guidelines, position papers and other recommendations made over the past 2 years.

JTS – PFC Clinical Practice Guidelines

Official Position Papers

Other Working Group Recommendations

  • 3. Master the basics that are TCCC/TECC because everything done (or not done) in the first hour has consequences later.

Read the Most Recent CoTCCC Protocol

  • 4. Make planning a top priority i.e. evacuation leg times, capability gaps and asset locations.

PFC Planning Considerations

  • 5. Identify gaps in capabilities, skills and equipment via the 10 Capabilities Paper and Grid.

10 Essential Core Capabilities

  • 6. Review and train Pharmacology practices and principals including sedation and regional nerve blocks if trained.

Pharm Principals

  • 7. Prepare checklists and cheat sheets to help relieve the medic of superfluous technical and medical information that they don’t use on a daily basis.

Pre-Deployment Checklists and Cheat Sheets

  • 8. Trending and documentation and trending because the scraps of cardboard medics are still using is not good enough.

PFC Flowsheet v24 and Documentation

Documentation in Prolonged Field Care CPG

  • 9. Insist on Telemedicine and Communication by using a pre-made script and practice.

Telemedicine Call Script

  • 10. Procedures and wound care principles that are taught but not routinely practiced. These will differ depending on the level the medic is trained. If something is taught, it should be refreshed and sustained. Fresh Whole Blood transfusions,

Tactical Damage Control Resuscitation July 2015

Everything You Need to Know About Foley Catheters

  • 11. Practice Nursing care basics such as Foley care, turning, ROM exercises, oral care and so on. These should be refreshed by the medic prior to any scenario or deployment. This can be done during non-trauma training days

Post Cric Checklist

Create a Care Plan

PFC Nursing Care Plan adapted from the 528th SORT

  • 12. Train your non-medics to assist your medics with nursing care tasks, trending, supply recognition etc.

Skills Non-medical Team Members Should Know For PFC

  • 13. Rehearse, practice and re-run through realistic full length scenarios with the entire team present, including leadership and non-medically trained personnel.

One way to run a Prolonged Field Care Scenario with references included

9 Patient Scenarios

  • 14. Be familiar with differences in physiology and the environments of Enroute Care including fixed wing, rotary wing and vehicle platforms. Have packing lists for each possibility.

PFC Nursing Care Plan adapted from the 528th SORT

  • 15. Scenarios can’t end until the patient handover is complete so that nothing you did is missed by the receiving facility or medic.

Patient Handover Form

PFCx Critical Care Comments-

  • 16. Know what “Right” looks like by emphasizing critical care and ICU for medics going on hospital rotations. MPT hospital rotations can be tweaked to incorporate more work in the ICU so that the medic learns what first world care looks like.

PFC Specific Hospital MPT Rotation AAR and Recommendations

17. Know your equipment. If you pack it in..be able to not only use the gear ( vents, monitors, foleys, etc.) but troubleshoot it as well. Are the batteries interchangeable? Can I still make it work if I accidentally brought the wrong tubing/connectors? Can I calculate a drip rate regardless of it being a macro/ micro set

Download this post by clicking the link below:

Upgrade Your Operational Medical Program with Prolonged Field Care

7 Comments on “Get Started Here  ”

  1. Pingback: Prolonged Field Care for the Combat Medic – Next Generation Combat Medic

  2. Pingback: Prolonged Field Care for the Combat Medic – Operational Medicine

  3. Pingback: Prolonged Field Care...in the ED • St Emlyn's

  4. Good afternoon from Madrid. This is Major Armando Munayco. UMAAD Madrid (http://www.ejercitodelaire.mde.es/EA/ejercitodelaire/es/organizacion/unidades/unidad/Unidad-Medica-Aerea-de-Apoyo-al-Despliegue-UMAAD-Madrid/) unit chief to depploy medical treatmen facilities unde the Spanish Air Force. And i lead the tactical medicine subsecretary that belongs to the Spanish Emergency Society (https://www.semes.org/home/secretarias/subsecretaria-de-sanidad-tactica/). We want in the SPAF and in the ER Medicine to develope skills. So we will folow your work and of course we are happy to colaborate in whatever you want. Thank you very much.
    Armando.

    https://twitter.com/sanidads/status/1141009488956272640?s=21

    • Thank you Sir! Please do not hesitate to make any suggestions or share any ideas. We are a small group and are open to collaboration. Until then, please share the website widely!
      SFC Paul Loos

  5. Pingback: All-Hazards EMS & Patient Access – HEAVY LIES THE HELMET

  6. Hello-
    I’m Rick. Trauma nurse for 27 years, acls/bls certified, Neurosurgical/neurological nursing instructor, paramedic for 13 years, all-discipline climber for 47 years. Just came across your site and wondering if you ever need volunteer help. Happy to travel, flexible schedule.
    Cheers!

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