LLAB Material
MARCH
Massive hemorrhage Airway Respiration Circulation Head injury/Hypothermia
Hair Regulations
NO minimums Max hair bulk: Males < 2 in Females < 4 in
5 C's
Confirm Clear Cordon Check Control
PAWS
Pain Antibiotics Wounds Splinting
Email Etiquette
*1. Introduction* a. Subject is brief and to the point. b. A proper greeting must be used in correspondence to the time of day. that the email is sent. Reference page 13. c. Address the highest-ranking individual first. i. Example: Good Morning Colonel Smith, ii. Example: Good Evening Cadet Doe, *2. Body* a. In military Emails, like formal professional emails, be concise, clear, and to the point with what is being written. i. DO NOT use casual language. ii. It is recommended if sending an email to Cadre to have a Wingmen review it first if possible. *3. Conclusion* a. To conclude an email properly, make sure your signature block is at the bottom of the email.
MEDEVAC 9-Line
"Break, break BDOC this is (call sign) prepare for MEDEVAC 9 line" *Say "break" after every line* *1. Location* *2. Call sign, frequency* *3. # of patients by precedence* a. Alpha - urgent b. Bravo - urgent surgical c. Charlie - priority d. Delta - routine *4. Special equipment required* a. Alpha - none b. Bravo - hoist c. Charlie - extraction equipment d. Delta - ventilator *5. # of patients and type* a. Alpha - litter (can't walk) b. Bravo - Ambulatory (can walk) *6. Security at pickup site* a. November - no enemies b. Papa - possible enemies c. Echo - enemies in area d. X-Ray - enemy troops in area, armed escort required *7. Method of marking* a. Alpha - panel color b. Bravo - pyrotechnic signal c. Charlie - smoke signal color d. Delta - none, no signal required e. Echo - other *8. Patient nationality and status* a. Alpha - U.S. military b. Bravo - U.S Civilian c. Charlie - non-U.S military d. Delta - non-U.S civilian e. Echo - enemy POW *9. NBC contamination* a. November - nuclear b. Bravo - biological c. Charlie - chemical d. None -none "Over"
TCCC
Tactical Combat Casualty Care