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Introduction to Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC)

Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) is a combat lifesaver course that outlines the priorities of medical care for casualties in combat-related situations as faced in military and law enforcement applications. Initially, it was developed developed for U.S. Special Operations Forces in 1996 but has become an international standard for trauma life support in prehospital combat medicine. Nearly 90% of combat-related fatalities occur before reaching a medical treatment facility, where high-quality prehospital emergency care reduces mortality rates resulting from a life-threatening injury sustained in duty. The TCCC working group includes physicians specializing in family, internal, and emergency medicine, physician assistants, medical educators, and combat paramedics. However, a TCCC course provides tactical medical training for a range of personnel, offering a range of high-yield life-saving guidelines and recommendations.

What TCCC Training Consists of

TCCC training is divided into three phases (care under fire, tactical field care, and tactical evacuation care) and only permits certain interventions to be performed in specific phases based on the danger to the provider and casualty.

Care Under Fire

The initial phase, care under fire, is unique to military and law enforcement applications compared to civilian prehospital scenarios. The priority remains on attaining fire superiority and minimizing additional injury to the casualty and other team members. As the opposing combatants are suppressed, providers can move casualties to a more secure area. The only medical intervention attempted during the current phase is the early application of tourniquets to halt life-threatening hemorrhaging.

Tactical Field Care

The subsequent phase, tactical field care, emphasizes establishing a security perimeter, maintaining situational awareness, triaging casualties, and providing medical care according to the MARCH algorithm: massive bleeding, airway management, respiration/breathing, circulation, and hypothermia prevention. Other interventions during the phase of providing tactical field care include addressing penetrating eye trauma, initiating advanced monitoring, and providing analgesia.

Tactical Evaluation Care

The final phase, tactical evacuation, consists of the same assessment and management included in the second phase but with an additional focus on advanced procedures as applicable during transportation to facilities that can provide higher-level medical care.

Importance Behind TCCC

The overall object of TCCC is to teach service members, either in the military or law enforcement, how to effectively treat combat casualties while preventing additional injuries and completing the mission at hand. Since the TCCC skills could bring value in extreme situations outside the battlefield, it is important to first complete the CPR and first aid techniques that are also the basis for TCCC medical training. Implementing the principles of TCCC has reduced preventable deaths on the battlefield.

Good first responder care is critical. Up to 28% of combat deaths today are potentially preventable, so good battlefield care is paramount in avoiding preventable deaths. Improvements in how we approach the combat casualty have resulted in significantly lower death rates in combat. TCCC is different from civilian trauma care training you may have received in the past, but TCCC will give you the tools you need!

The Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) course introduces evidence-based, life-saving techniques and strategies for providing the best trauma care in all hostile environments. Ideal for medical and non-medical personnel involved in any unit or team, whether it is military, law enforcement, anti-poaching units or civilian/private sectors.