Reynhout David J, Colesar Michael T, Bibbens Sara E
2nd Brigade 11th Airborne Division, Fort Richardson, AK 99505, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD 20814, USA.
Mil Med. 2025 Apr 23;190(5-6):1052-1058. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usaf079.
Timely battlefield resuscitation improves service member survivability. The Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) guidelines focus on early interventions to mitigate preventable causes of death. Key to this guideline is the early and correct administration of medications like tranexamic acid (TXA), antibiotics, analgesia, and calcium if indicated. A concerning trend in recent retrospective data reviews has found that combat medics have poor adherence to the TCCC guidelines, specifically inadequate tourniquet placement and underuse of TXA and analgesic medications. It is unknown what role knowledge and training play compared to complex operational factors. This is the first study to assess TCCC medication knowledge and drug administration for commonly used TCCC medications (TXA, calcium, ketamine, and ertapenem) in a simulated trauma training.
This is a multiple-group cross-sectional observational study of simulated medication administration in accordance with TCCC guidelines. A convenience sample of medics, previously trained in TCCC, completed an individual simulated training that required the administration of 4 commonly used TCCC medications, TXA, calcium, ketamine, and ertapenem. Participant demographic and training data were collected. Trained graders assessed specific skills using a point-based checklist. This study was deemed exempt by the Institutional Review Board.
There were 127 medics who participated, completing 432 unique medication encounters. Individual medications were correctly identified 85% of the time. The appropriate dose was identified 61% of the time. Individual medications were correctly administered 40.7% (95% CI, 34.7-43.1) of the time. Only 7% of participants identified, dosed, and administered all 4 medications correctly. Senior medics had higher rates of drug identification (1.084, 1.006-1.167). There was a trend toward higher rates of dose identification, but it was not significant (1.131, 0.963-1.327). For junior medics, dose identification was positively associated with Table VIII training within 6 months (1.414, 1.119-1.744) and self-perceived TCCC confidence (1.977, 1.271-3.387).
Significant deficiencies were noted in combat medics' administration of TCCC medications, suggesting that gaps in TCCC knowledge and skills may impact TCCC adherence in the operational environment. Further studies are needed to assess the efficacy of current training, the rate of skills atrophy, and interval training needs.
及时的战场复苏可提高军人的生存率。战术战斗伤救治(TCCC)指南侧重于早期干预,以减轻可预防的死亡原因。该指南的关键在于,如果有指征,应早期且正确地使用诸如氨甲环酸(TXA)、抗生素、镇痛药和钙剂等药物。最近的回顾性数据审查中一个令人担忧的趋势发现,战斗医护人员对TCCC指南的依从性较差,特别是止血带放置不当以及TXA和镇痛药使用不足。与复杂的作战因素相比,知识和培训所起的作用尚不清楚。这是第一项在模拟创伤训练中评估TCCC常用药物(TXA、钙剂、氯胺酮和厄他培南)的药物知识和给药情况的研究。
这是一项按照TCCC指南进行模拟药物给药的多组横断面观察性研究。一个方便样本的医护人员,之前接受过TCCC培训,完成了一项个人模拟训练,该训练要求使用4种常用的TCCC药物,即TXA、钙剂、氯胺酮和厄他培南。收集了参与者的人口统计学和培训数据。训练有素的评分人员使用基于点数的检查表评估特定技能。本研究被机构审查委员会认定为豁免研究。
有127名医护人员参与,完成了432次独特的药物使用情况。个体药物的正确识别率为85%。正确识别适当剂量的比例为61%。个体药物的正确给药率为40.7%(95%置信区间,34.7 - 43.1)。只有7%的参与者正确识别、确定剂量并使用了所有4种药物。资深医护人员的药物识别率更高(1.084,1.006 - 1.167)。剂量识别率有上升趋势,但不显著(1.131,0.963 - 1.327)。对于初级医护人员,剂量识别与6个月内的表VIII培训(1.414,1.119 - 1.744)以及自我感知的TCCC信心(1.977,1.271 - 3.387)呈正相关。
战斗医护人员在TCCC药物给药方面存在明显不足,这表明TCCC知识和技能的差距可能会影响作战环境中对TCCC的依从性。需要进一步研究来评估当前培训的效果、技能萎缩率以及间隔培训需求。