A Word From Our Publisher
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Greetings JSOM Newsletter Subscribers,
Good news! The Ranger Medic Handbook is finally back in stock. We appreciate the patience so many of you have demonstrated while waiting for us to restock this title. You can now purchase the book on our Online Store or on our Amazon page.
The Fall edition of the JSOM is out. Digital subscribers can now access it and print subscribers have already started to receive their copies. Don't forget to share your thoughts and feedback with us on all social media platforms @jsomonline. We want to hear from you!
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Respectfully,
Michelle DuGuay Landers, MBA, BSN, RN
Breakaway Media, LLC
Publisher
Journal of Special Operations Medicine (JSOM)
Lt Col, USAF/NC (Ret)
publisher@jsomonline.org
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Journal of Special Operations Medicine Featured Abstracts
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ABSTRACT
Background: Resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA) is a technique that uses internal clamping of the aorta to control abdominal, pelvic, or junctional bleeding. We created a course to train military physicians in both civilian prehospital use and battlefield use. To determine the effectiveness of this training, we conducted REBOA training for French military emergency physicians. Methods: We trained 15 military physicians, organizing the training as follows: a half-day of theoretical training, a half-day of training on mannequins, a half-day on human corpses, and a half-day on a living pig. The primary endpoint was the success rate after training. We defined success as the balloon being inflated in zone 1 of a PryTime mannequin. The secondary endpoints were the progression of each trainee during the training, the difference between the median completion duration before and after training, the median post-training duration, and the median duration for the placement of the sheath introducer before and after training.
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ABSTRACT
Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) has always emphasized the need to consider the tactical setting in developing a plan to care for wounded unit members while still on the battlefield. The TCCC Guidelines provide an evidence-based trauma care approach to specific injuries that may occur in combat. However, they do not address what modifications might need to be made to the basic TCCC guidelines due to the specific tactical setting in which the scenario occurs. The scenario presented below depicts a combat swimmer operation in which a unit member is shot while in the water. The unit casualty response plan for a combat swimmer who sustains a gunshot wound to the chest while on a mission is complicated by the inability to perform indicated medical interventions for the casualty while he is in the water. It is also complicated by the potential for ballistic damage to his underwater breathing apparatus and the need to remain submerged after wounding for at least for a period of time to avoid further hostile fire.
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October 2021 Featured Article
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Timeline of Psychological and Physiological Effects Occurring During Military Deployment on a Medical Team
Hall AB, Qureshi I, Wilson RL, Glasser JJ. 21(3). 118 - 122. (Journal Article)
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ABSTRACT
Background: The negative effects of deployment on military mental health is a topic of major interest. Predeployment and postdeployment assessments are common, but to date there has been little to no intradeployment assessment of military members. This study attempts to determine the physiological and psychiatric effects on Servicemembers over the course of deployment, to provide a baseline data set and to allow for better prediction, prevention, and intervention on these negative effects. Methods: A retrospective analysis was performed on physiological and psychiatric data collected on a single deployed medical team between 16 January 2020 and 12 July 2020. Patient health screening questionnaires (PHQ-9) and physiological measurements were completed serially twice weekly on five active-duty military volunteers for the entirety of a scheduled 6-month deployment. Results: Depression symptom development followed a linear trend (p = .0149) and severity followed a quadratic trend (p < .001) over a length of a deployment. Weight (p = .435) and pulse (p = .416) were not statistically altered. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) had a statistically significant reduction (p < .001). Conclusion: In this specific population, there was a linear relationship between time deployed and depression symptoms and severity. Depression symptom severity decreases toward the end of deployment but does not return to baseline before deployment's end.
Keywords: mental health; deployment; depression; military; physiology; blood pressure; weight; pulse
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The Journal of Special Operations Medicine Podcast
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The JSOM podcast digs deeper into the articles and subjects that matter to our readers. Our podcast hosts, Captains Alex Merkle and Josh Randles, tackle articles from the journal based on merit, interest, and application for operators in the field. In addition, the podcast features a special, not to be missed Interview Series with leaders, doctors, and authors.
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FALL 2021
In this episode of the JSOM Podcast, Alex and Josh start by reviewing, "Timeline of Psychological and Physiological Effects Occurring During Military Deployment on a Medical Team" by Hall, et. al. Guest reviewer Rico Pesce and SSG Meredith Cole review "Blood Product Administration During Transport Throughout the US Africa Command Theater of Operation," by Schauer, et. al. Josh and Alex discuss, "Impact of a 10,000m Cold-Water Swim on Norwegian Naval Special Forces Recruits" with author Jorgen Melau.
Hall AB, Qureshi I, Wilson RL, Glasser JJ
Schauer SG, Naylor JF, Fisher AD, Hyams DG, Carius BM, Escandon MA, Linscomb CD, McDonald H, Cap AP, Bynum J
Melau J, Hisdal J, Solberg PA
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Highlights from the JSOM Special Talk Series
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COL (Ret) Russ Kotwal, MD, MPH
Dr. Kotwal spent nearly 30 years in the military and more than 15 years in operational assignments with the 25th Infantry Division, 75th Ranger Regiment, and U.S Army Special Operations Command. He deployed to combat 12 times with the Rangers -- nine times to Afghanistan and three to Iraq. He conducted hundreds of combat ground and air missions as the senior medical provider and is highly decorated, including five Bronze Star medals, two Joint Service Commendation medals for Valor, and two combat jump stars, among many others. Dr. Kotwal is also a master parachutist, master flight surgeon, and Ranger qualified. He is credited with numerous novel training and technology initiatives, professional publications, and national and international presentations related primarily to prehospital medicine on the battlefield. Dr. Kotwal is an adjunct professor for both the Texas A&M Health Science Center and the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences. He has been an advisor for the Defense Health Agency’s Joint Trauma System and Committee on Tactical Combat Casualty Care, as well as the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Family Physicians, a Hero of Military Medicine award recipient, a Distinguished Member of the 75th Ranger Regiment, an inductee into the US Army Ranger Hall of Fame, and the current president of the Special Operations Medical Association.
MSG (Ret.) Rick Hines I
Rick Hines has a long history in Special Operations and is currently an instructor Special Warfare Training Group. He teaches at the SF Medical Sergeant Recertification Course and focuses on anesthesia and surgical care in the austere environment. Rick discusses the benefits of recycling at the 18D course, historical basis, and current practice of surgical care and anesthesia for the far forward Special Operations medic.
Dr. Kyle Stigall
Dr. Stigall attended the United States Air Force Academy for undergrad and the University of Kentucky for medical school. He is currently a fourth-year general surgery resident at Brooke Army Medical Center. He completed a research year at the Naval Medical Research Unit in San Antonio in 2020 with a focus on trauma resuscitation and plans to apply to the Air Force Special Operations Surgical Team next year.
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Please Support Our Sponsors
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Institutional Subscribers
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The JSOM is incredibly grateful to have the support of many institutions around the world. We would like to thank our recent institutional subscribers and re-subscribers for their support by acknowledging them in our eNewsletter and, when applicable, sharing their social media information.
Visit https://jsom.us/Library for a full list of institutions that are currently subscribing to the JSOM. We are beginning a campaign to expand our institutional subscriptions. If you think your company would benefit from an institutional subscription, let us know! We'll be happy to talk to you and get the ball rolling. You don't have to be a university or medical center to subscribe - we have many EMS units, government agencies, and military medical units both in the United States and abroad.
Are you on the list? Great! Need to know how to access our resources? You can either contact your head librarian, or shoot an email to subscriptions@JSOMonline.org.
Institutions receive either a print copy of our journal, digital access, or both. Digital subscribers have unlimited access to our full compendium of articles, journals, and the ATP-P. If you are a student, researcher, doctor, or other medical professional at one of these institutions, please contact your librarian for login details. Additionally, the digital resources are typically available 2-3 weeks ahead of print publication.
If your institution is not on the list and you would like more information about our institutional access, contact our subscriptions manager, Dr. Scott Graverson.
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Support the Journal of Special Operations Medicine
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CINCU, ROMANIA
DVIDS
A U.S. Army Soldier assigned to Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 16th Infantry Regiment “Iron Rangers,” 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, and a Portuguese Soldier provide tactical medical care for a simulated casualty in Cincu, Romania. This training was a part of multiple situational training exercises that U.S. Soldiers executed with multinational partners from Romania, Poland and Portugal. The U.S. Army’s battlefield systems and technologies must work and communicate in concert with those of our allies and partners so we can leverage these relationships and fight smarter and more effectively.
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Journal of Special Operations Medicine
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