Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps
-
Recently published case reports, coupled with a large observational study of 1017 deployed servicemen to Iraq (January 2009), has highlighted the issue and potential concerns regarding the unregulated use of dietary and exercise supplements within the British military. Consequently, an exploratory pilot study was undertaken to assess whether the findings of the previous Iraq study were applicable to current deployed British servicemen in Afghanistan. ⋯ A significant proportion of the British servicemen employed on operations in Afghanistan who were sampled, admitted to current dietary and exercise supplement use whilst on deployment. The results of this small study suggest that their use on operations may be increasing. Smoking rates and caffeine consumption, on deployment, remain high in the British military. A larger detailed study with greater representation among soldiers deployed to forward operating bases would be helpful to fully appreciate the scale of supplement use.
-
The purpose of this article is to consider three underappreciated but important features of high performance teams: the trade-off relation between social and technical competence, the relevance of team size on productivity, and the inevitability of tensions that, while often experienced as dysfunctional, are in fact quite useful. It does so by reviewing a series of related studies in aviation and the organisation sciences, and by extrapolating insights for crew resource management in major military trauma along two generic themes: team context and team process.
-
This article represents a consensus view of those TTWG members present in Birmingham and taking into account the views of the other group members via email discussion. We believe it represents clear guidance for the deployed clinician and recommend the use of selective non-operative management when appropriate.
-
Massive Transfusion is a part of Damage Control Resuscitation. The aim of transfusion therapy is to restore oxygen delivery to poorly perfused tissues and to treat the acute coagulopathy of trauma. The severity and complexity of modern injuries have led to the use of swift, protocol-driven care with the use of'Shock Packs' and management of metabolic complications. ⋯ It has also enabled clinicians to direct individualised transfusion support following initial resuscitation i.e. goal directed therapy. Future technical solutions should further support the prehospital delivery of transfusion while addressing the logistic tail. However, the key to success is the knowledge and skills of frontline staff to deliver safe and appropriate blood transfusion.