On October 2, 2017, we woke up to the grim news of another mass shooting. The night before, a man in Las Vegas had opened fire on a crowd of concert fans, discharging high-powered weapons from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay hotel, killing 58 people and injuring over 800. Police stormed the hotel but found the gunman had already committed suicide, thus ending the siege after leaving a morbid path in his wake.
Increasingly, EMS providers find themselves responding to protracted scenes of violence. They must be trained to work alongside law enforcement in high-risk scenarios, where a conventional approach to emergency response may not be feasible. Thus, tactical medicine has evolved.
Tactical Emergency Medical Support (TEMS)1 builds upon the principles of numerous disciplines, primarily from military medicine, disaster response, and urban search and rescue. Its goal is to devise a system of medical care that supports law enforcement missions, to reduce casualties while minimizing threats to responders.
TEMS aims at optimizing the health, safety, and welfare of law enforcement officers and the communities they protect. It is broken down into two primary functional components:
By providing specialized medical support, TEMS not only allows special operations teams to function with increased safety, but it also improves the probability of mission success in a number of ways: reducing morbidity and mortality, improving team morale, minimizing incident liability, and providing on-site medical care that reduces the number of prisoner transfers to medical facilities.
During tactical missions, law enforcement will divide the target area into zones of operation, with inner and outer perimeters providing static boundaries for their operations. TEMS divides these areas of operation into three Zones of Care:
TEMS practice guidelines define the rescue activities that occur within each zone. Certain treatments are limited, based on the level of risk within each zone, and include these guidelines:
The high probability of traumatic injuries resulting from tactical medical scenarios ensures the need for suction. Gunshot wounds, blast injuries, or toxic exposures will produce bleeding and respiratory threats, all of which may require suction. But like other tactical gear, your portable suction unit must be designed with certain specifications in mind:
Tactical medical scenarios can be long-term, large-scale incidents that require special training, extensive preplanning, and a tailored approach to emergency care. Be sure your portable suction units are up to the task.
1 2011
Prehospital Trauma Life Support, American College of Surgeons, Committee on Trauma, MOSBY JEMS, Elsevier.