Winter 2015 Journal (Vol 15 Iss 4) Digital Journal

$47.00

SKU: Winter-2015-D Categories: , Tags: ,

Description

DIGITAL EDITION of the Winter 2015 Journal of Special Operations Medicine. This does NOT include a print copy.
Contents:

Hypolipidemia in a Special Operations Candidate: Case Report and Review of the Literature
The Combat Medic Aid Bag: 2025 CoTCCC Top 10 Recommended Battlefield Trauma Care Research, Development, and Evaluation Priorities for 2015
Testing Tourniquet Use in a Manikin Model: Two Improvised Techniques
Different Width and Tightening System: Emergency Tourniquets on Distal Limb Segments
Comprehensive Performance Nutrition for Special Operations Forces
Evaluating Alternatives to Traditional Cotton Laparotomy Sponges for Blood Absorption in the Austere and Mobile Surgical Environment
OK, Doc . . . What Do I Really Have? Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Versus Traumatic Brain Injury
Garrison Clinical Setting Inadequate for Maintenance of Procedural Skills for Emergency Medicine Physicians: A Cross-Sectional Study
Remote Telementored Ultrasound-Directed Compression to Potentially Accelerate Hemostasis in Exsanguinating Junctional Vascular Injuries
Fever and Thrombocytopenia in a Returning Soldier
Providers Face Challenges Maintaining Deployment-Ready Skills at Garrison Hospitals
“Rationale for Use of Intravenous Acetaminophen in Special Operations Medicine”
“Rationale for Use of Intravenous Acetaminophen in Special Operations Medicine”: Reply
Taser and Conducted Energy Weapons
US Military Dietary Protein Recommendations: A Simple But Often Confused Topic
Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever
Middle East Respiratory Syndrome
Injuries and Footwear (Part 1): Athletic Shoe History and Injuries in Relation to Foot Arch Height and Training in Boots
Real-World Experience With Three Point-of-Care Blood Analyzers in Deployed Environments
Recovery of Bacteria and Fungi From a Leg Wound
Application of Medical Intelligence Prep of the Environment: A Review of Operational Vignettes
Deconstructing the Definition of Prolonged Field Care
Vietnam 1968-1969: A Battalion Surgeon’s Journal
“Follow Admiral William Halsey’s advice: Look around and see what needs to be done. Then do it.”
The Continuing Threat of Intentional Mass Casualty Events in the U.S.
Military History of Increasing Survival: The U.S. Military Experience with Tourniquets and Hemostatic Dressings in the Afghanistan and Iraq Conflicts
Hemorrhage Control Devices: Tourniquets and Hemostatic Dressings
Intentional Mass Casualty Events: Implications for Prehospital Emergency Medical Services Systems
Integrated Education of All Responders
TCCC Updates: Translating Military Advances in Exdternal Hemorrhage Control to Law Enforcement
TacMed Updates: Building Community Resilience to Dynamic Mass Casualty Incidents: A Multiagency White Paper in Support of the First Care Provider