• Injury · May 2016

    Augmentation of point of injury care: Reducing battlefield mortality-The IDF experience.

    • Benov Avi Israel Defense Forces' Medical Corps, Ramat Gan, Israel; USA Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA, Fort Sam Houston, TX, USA. Electronic address: avi.benov@gmail.com., Glassberg Elon, Erez Nissim Baruch, Shina Avi, Twig Gilad, Levi Moran, Zoarets Itay, Sagi Ram, Bader Tarif, Dagan David, Yitzhak Avraham, and Kreiss Yitshak.
    • Israel Defense Forces' Medical Corps, Ramat Gan, Israel; USA Institute of Surgical Research, JBSA, Fort Sam Houston, TX, USA. Electronic address: avi.benov@gmail.com.
    • Injury. 2016 May 1; 47 (5): 993-1000.

    Study ObjectiveIn 2012, the Israel Defense Forces Medical Corps (IDF-MC) set a goal of reducing mortality and eliminating preventable death on the battlefield. A force buildup plan entitled "My Brother's Keeper" was launched addressing: trauma medicine, training, change of Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPGs), injury prevention, data collection, global collaboration and more. The aim of this article is to examine how military medical care has evolved due "My Brother's Keeper" between Second Lebanon War (SLW, 2006) to Operation Protective Edge (OPE, 2014).MethodsRecords of all casualties during OPE and SLW were extracted and analyzed from the I.D.F Trauma Registry. Noncombat injuries and civilian injuries from missile attacks were excluded from this analysis.ResultsThe plans main impacts were; incorporation of a physician or paramedic as an integral part of each fighting company, implementation of new CPGs, introduction of new approaches for extremity haemorrhage control and Remote Damage Control Resuscitation at point of injury (POI) using single donor reconstituted freeze dried plasma (25 casualties) and transexamic acid (98 casualties). During OPE, 704 soldiers sustained injuries compared with 833 casualties during SLW. Fatalities were 65 and 119, respectively, cumulating to Case Fatality Rate of 9.2% and 14.3%, respectively.ConclusionsSignificant changes in the way the IDF-MC provides combat casualty care have been made in recent years. It is the transformation from concept to doctrine and integration into a structured and Goal-Oriented Casualty Care System, especially POI care that led to the unprecedented survival rates in IDF as shown in this conflict.Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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