School of Medicine, Tulane Medical Center, New Orleans, LA 70112, USA.
Department of Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN 37232, USA.
Mil Med. 2024 Aug 30;189(9-10):e2206-e2210. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usae073.
The Army utilizes Individual Critical Task Lists (ICTLs) to track and ensure competency and deployment readiness of its medical service members. ICTLs are the various skills and procedures that the Army has deemed foundational for each area of concentration (AOC)/military occupational specialty (MOS). While many ICTLs involve the patient care that military medical providers regularly provide, some procedures are not as commonly performed. This, when coupled with lower patient volume at military treatment facilities (MTF), poses a challenge for maintaining skill competency and deployment readiness. Fort Campbell's Blanchfield Army Community Hospital (BACH) has created a holistic and unique solution to meet many of these standardized requirements and support a ready medical force. By optimizing the Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS®) course curriculum to facilitate ICTL completion, BACH has increased its ICTL completion rates, ATLS® course exposure, and streamlined training requirements. The purpose of this article is to describe this best practice and suggest its applicability to other MTFs.
By cross-referencing the ATLS® course curriculum and appendices with ICTLs, BACH has augmented ATLS® course certification with the additional completion of 12 ICTLs. This new approach not only increases ICTL completion, but also increases ATLS® curriculum exposure to medical providers, such as Registered Nurses or Nurse Practitioners, who would not typically take ATLS®.
Since starting this new approach in April 2021, 73 military medical personnel have completed the ATLS® course at BACH, with 24 different medical specialties represented. A total of 361 ICTLs have been completed with specific ICTL completion counts ranging from 13 to 48. Each ICTL tested was completed 100% of its annual requirement.
ATLS® is a mandatory joint interoperability standard for military physicians and it is also an Army ICTL for many AOCs/MOSs. Only counting completion of this course as one ICTL is a missed opportunity for the time spent by Army medical providers and limits the exposure of ATLS® to select AOCs/MOSs. This optimized and novel approach has been successful at BACH, suggesting its applicability at other MTFs that serve as ATLS® testing sites.
陆军利用个人关键任务清单 (ICTL) 来跟踪和确保其医疗服务人员的能力和部署准备情况。ICTL 是陆军认为每个专业领域 (AOC)/军事职业专业 (MOS) 的基础的各种技能和程序。虽然许多 ICTL 涉及军事医疗提供者经常提供的患者护理,但有些程序并不经常执行。再加上军事治疗设施 (MTF) 的患者数量较少,这对保持技能能力和部署准备构成了挑战。坎贝尔堡的布兰奇菲尔德陆军社区医院 (BACH) 已经创建了一个全面而独特的解决方案,以满足许多这些标准化要求,并支持一支准备就绪的医疗部队。通过优化高级创伤生命支持 (ATLS®) 课程课程,以促进 ICTL 的完成,BACH 提高了其 ICTL 的完成率、ATLS®课程的曝光率,并简化了培训要求。本文的目的是描述这一最佳实践,并建议其在其他 MTF 中的适用性。
通过交叉参考 ATLS®课程课程和附录与 ICTL,BACH 已经在 ATLS®课程认证中增加了 12 个 ICTL 的额外完成。这种新方法不仅提高了 ICTL 的完成率,还增加了 ATLS®课程对医疗服务提供者的曝光率,例如注册护士或执业护士,他们通常不会参加 ATLS®。
自 2021 年 4 月开始采用这种新方法以来,已有 73 名军事医务人员在 BACH 完成了 ATLS®课程,共有 24 个不同的医疗专业。共完成了 361 个 ICTL,具体 ICTL 的完成次数从 13 到 48 不等。每个 ICTL 测试都完成了其年度要求的 100%。
ATLS®是军事医生的强制性联合互操作性标准,也是许多 AOC/MOS 的陆军 ICTL。仅将完成此课程算作一个 ICTL 是对陆军医疗服务提供者所花费时间的错失机会,并限制了 ATLS®对选定 AOC/MOS 的曝光率。这种优化和新颖的方法在 BACH 取得了成功,表明它适用于其他作为 ATLS®测试站点的 MTF。