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    New training course offers medics, nurses hands-on experience in austere environment

    New training course gives medics, nurses hands-on experience in austere environment

    Photo By Jason W. Edwards | U.S. Air Force Capt. Megan Honeywell, emergency trauma nurse, treats a simulated...... read more read more

    JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO, TX, UNITED STATES

    03.01.2023

    Story by Lori Newman  

    Brooke Army Medical Center Public Affairs   

    JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO, Texas (March 1, 2023) -- Army and Air Force personnel from Brooke Army Medical Center’s Department of Emergency Medicine recently established a simulation training platform to increase readiness and meet Joint Commission requirements for staff development and training.

    The Tactical Trauma Reaction and Evacuation Crossover Course, or TTREX, is designed to test and validate Individual Critical Task Lists and the Comprehensive Medical Readiness Program for military medical personnel.

    “The TTREX course was developed to familiarize military and civilian personnel with critical trauma skills relevant to both the hospital and the austere environment and to maintain mission readiness,” explained Army 1st Lt. Jackson Goddard, registered nurse.

    The eight-hour course at the Torch Training Site on Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland incorporates battlefield trauma simulations, evacuation procedures, and trauma care in a Role 2 environment. Role 2, also known as forward resuscitative care, has the capability to manage more advanced trauma patients and continue more advanced resuscitative measures in an austere environment such as a combat support hospital.

    “We have combined the point of injury with the Role 2 environment,” said Air Force 1st Lt. Marissa Vasek, registered nurse. “Our goal is to get people to understand the deployment setting and the challenges they might face while deployed including limitations with supplies, manpower or experience.”

    Additionally, participants get to experience what it’s like to be on a C-130 Hercules military transport aircraft during a critical care air transport mission to see how a patient is transported to a higher echelon of care.

    Combat medic Army Spc. Wade Wolf feels the training is beneficial because people get to see how a patient moves from the point of injury to a stateside hospital.

    “We’ve had more than 40 participants over the two-day exercise,” Wolf said. “I would say about half of them have never been deployed.”

    Emergency nurse Army Capt. Megan Gross agrees.

    “This has been one of my favorite courses I have attended in my 14 years in the military,” Gross said. “The course allows nurses and medics to test their trauma knowledge in a tactical environment and provides a realistic peek into the deployed setting. The teamwork and camaraderie amongst the attendees and the instructors is unique and fosters a real esprit de corps.”

    “My favorite part was the Role 2 trauma lane and having the opportunity to work in a small team to assess, perform interventions, and prepare our patient for transport,” she added. “The autonomy aspect provided a unique learning opportunity we often do not get in the hospital setting. The instructors provided a learning environment that was challenging but collaborative at the same time. I loved it!”

    The TTREX course will be offered quarterly and is open to service members, civilians, and contractors.

    “The course is geared to medics and nurses, but it’s open to anyone who’s willing to learn or just wants to observe,” Vasek said. “We have even had a few physicians come through.”

    “A part of creating this exercise was to help military nurses and medics gain the confidence they need to perform under high stress while downrange,” added Army Capt. Brianna Barkley, a registered nurse who helped create the course. “We have seen camaraderie built amongst BAMC teammates while also checking off required readiness skills. What made our exercise successful is the fact that it is a learning environment. Participants feel comfortable making mistakes and learning from those mistakes to build confidence during deployments.”

    “This training is invaluable because it allows service members to maintain combat readiness,” Gross said. “We have Individual Critical Task Lists, which are required training tasks for our jobs. This training opportunity allowed me to complete all of my ICTLS for the year, which maintains my individual combat readiness.”

    “I was so impressed with this course as a participant that I volunteered to become an instructor and look forward to being a part of the next TTREX course,” she added.

    The next course will be in May 2023. BAMC personnel who want to participate in the next course can search “TTREX” on the Relias Learning website and register until the course is full.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 03.01.2023
    Date Posted: 03.01.2023 17:07
    Story ID: 439524
    Location: JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO, TX, US

    Web Views: 760
    Downloads: 0

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