• Prehosp Emerg Care · Oct 2009

    The lifesaving potential of specialized on-scene medical support for urban tactical operations.

    • Jeffery C Metzger, Alexander L Eastman, Fernando L Benitez, and Paul E Pepe.
    • Emergency Medicine Section of EMS, Homeland Security and Disaster Medicine, and the Department of Surgery, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390-8579, USA.
    • Prehosp Emerg Care. 2009 Oct 1;13(4):528-31.

    AbstractSince the 1980s, the specialized field of tactical medicine has evolved with growing support from numerous law-enforcement and medical organizations. On-scene backup from tactical emergency medical support (TEMS) providers has not only permitted more immediate advanced medical aid to injured officers, victims, bystanders, and suspects, but also allows for rapid after-incident medical screening or minor treatments that can obviate an unnecessary transport to an emergency department. The purpose of this report is to document one very explicit benefit of TEMS deployment, namely, a situation in which a police officer's life was saved by the routine on-scene presence of specialized TEMS physicians. In this specific case, a police officer was shot in the anterior neck during a law-enforcement operation and became moribund with massive hemorrhage and compromised airway. Two TEMS physicians, who had been integrated into the tactical law-enforcement team, were on scene, controlled the hemorrhage, and provided a surgical airway. By the time of arrival at the hospital, the patient had begun purposeful movements and, within 12 hours, was alert and oriented. Considering the rapid decline in the patient's condition, it was later deemed by quality assurance reviewers that the on-scene presence of these TEMS providers was lifesaving.

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