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- Craig D Nowadly, Kyle E Foley, Maxwell L Davis, Erik J Hebert, and Gabe A Corey.
- Department of Emergency Medicine, Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234, USA.
- Mil Med. 2021 Nov 10.
IntroductionCritical Care Air Transport Team (CCATT) is a three-person United States Air Force (USAF) medical asset, typically providing intercontinental medical evacuation on large military aircraft. The CCATT equipment Allowance Standard (AS) weighs approximately 272 kg (600 lbs). In austere locations, CCATT teams may augment contract medical evacuation (CME) personnel or Pararescue (PJ) in small aircraft with limited space for medical equipment. It was unknown what deployed PJ and CME carry within their packouts. We sought to design a packout or "Go Bag," weighing less than 22.7 kg (50 lbs) and sourced from the CCATT AS, that a CCATT member could use to complement CME or PJ equipment to provide a higher level of care while limiting redundancy.Materials And MethodsEquipment lists were obtained from a CME and PJs from two separate USAF squadrons. The equipment lists were combined to provide a reference for development of a CCATT Go Bag. Three members of a deployed CCATT team independently generated a list of necessary equipment from the CCATT AS. The list was peer reviewed by a separate, deployed CCATT team.ResultsA Go Bag was developed with the supplies and equipment necessary for video laryngoscopy, ventilation, invasive pressure monitoring, basic laboratory capability, chest tube placement, ultrasound, and advanced pharmacologic interventions. The Go Bag weighed 18.3 kg (40.4 lbs). A separate respiratory bag weighing 1.1 kg (2.4 lbs) was attached directly to a ventilator. Intravenous pumps and cardiac monitoring equipment were notable ICU equipment excluded from the Go Bag.ConclusionMajor components of the CCATT AS can be reduced into a Go Bag and accompanying Ventilator Accessory Bag. This may benefit CCATT teams required to augment PJs or CME in small aircraft during prolonged field care scenarios.Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Association of Military Surgeons of the United States 2021. This work is written by (a) US Government employee(s) and is in the public domain in the US.
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