分布式海上行动与医疗挑战:医疗共同行动图如何帮助缩小差距》(Distributed Maritime Operations and the Medical Challenge: How a Medical Common Operating Picture Can Help Bridge the Gap)。
Jacob H Cole, Scott Hughey, Joshua Kotler, John de Geus, Adam Brust, Kyle Checchi, Andrew Lin
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By providing a shared view of the medical situation across the theater, encompassing logistics, personnel, and patient data, a medical COP has the potential to facilitate medical command and control (MED C2) in DMO/EABO. The implementation of a medical COP has the potential to optimize resource allocation, enhance situational awareness, streamline medical evacuation, and reduce healthcare provider moral injury in large-scale combat operations. A medical COP will allow medical planners to make informed decisions on triage, resupply, and evacuation, ensuring the best use of limited medical resources. This is done by leveraging a comprehensive understanding of the medical landscape, enabling informed clinical and operational decision-making by humanitarian and combat personnel respectively. A fully realized medical COP system will enable a dynamic theater evacuation policy, balancing the conflicting needs of patient care at higher echelons with the operational expediency of returning servicemembers to their operational units, thereby maximizing evacuation effectiveness. It will further enable medical personnel to perform dynamic casualty triage based on operational realities, mitigating potential ethical dilemmas. Implementing such a medical COP system will require overcoming communication limitations to facilitate data exchange and potentially integrating clinical decision support tools for real-time data analysis and recommendations. It will also require the rapid adoption of modernized operational medicine documentation solutions by medical assets within the operational forces. Ultimately, this work suggests that a medical COP has the potential to bridge the gap between traditional medical planning and the unique demands of DMO/EABO, ultimately optimizing casualty care, maximizing resource efficiency, and preserving the fighting force.</p>","PeriodicalId":18638,"journal":{"name":"Military Medicine","volume":" ","pages":"95-98"},"PeriodicalIF":1.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Distributed Maritime Operations and the Medical Challenge: How a Medical Common Operating Picture Can Help Bridge the Gap.\",\"authors\":\"Jacob H Cole, Scott Hughey, Joshua Kotler, John de Geus, Adam Brust, Kyle Checchi, Andrew Lin\",\"doi\":\"10.1093/milmed/usae307\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>This work explores the challenges of delivering medical care in the geographically dispersed and resource-constrained environment of Distributed Maritime Operations (DMO) and Expeditionary Advanced Base Operations (EABO). 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Distributed Maritime Operations and the Medical Challenge: How a Medical Common Operating Picture Can Help Bridge the Gap.
This work explores the challenges of delivering medical care in the geographically dispersed and resource-constrained environment of Distributed Maritime Operations (DMO) and Expeditionary Advanced Base Operations (EABO). Traditional medical planning approaches may struggle to adapt to the vast operational space, extended evacuation times, and limited medical force present in these scenarios. The concept of a Medical Common Operating Picture (COP) emerges as a potential solution. By providing a shared view of the medical situation across the theater, encompassing logistics, personnel, and patient data, a medical COP has the potential to facilitate medical command and control (MED C2) in DMO/EABO. The implementation of a medical COP has the potential to optimize resource allocation, enhance situational awareness, streamline medical evacuation, and reduce healthcare provider moral injury in large-scale combat operations. A medical COP will allow medical planners to make informed decisions on triage, resupply, and evacuation, ensuring the best use of limited medical resources. This is done by leveraging a comprehensive understanding of the medical landscape, enabling informed clinical and operational decision-making by humanitarian and combat personnel respectively. A fully realized medical COP system will enable a dynamic theater evacuation policy, balancing the conflicting needs of patient care at higher echelons with the operational expediency of returning servicemembers to their operational units, thereby maximizing evacuation effectiveness. It will further enable medical personnel to perform dynamic casualty triage based on operational realities, mitigating potential ethical dilemmas. Implementing such a medical COP system will require overcoming communication limitations to facilitate data exchange and potentially integrating clinical decision support tools for real-time data analysis and recommendations. It will also require the rapid adoption of modernized operational medicine documentation solutions by medical assets within the operational forces. Ultimately, this work suggests that a medical COP has the potential to bridge the gap between traditional medical planning and the unique demands of DMO/EABO, ultimately optimizing casualty care, maximizing resource efficiency, and preserving the fighting force.
期刊介绍:
Military Medicine is the official international journal of AMSUS. Articles published in the journal are peer-reviewed scientific papers, case reports, and editorials. The journal also publishes letters to the editor.
The objective of the journal is to promote awareness of federal medicine by providing a forum for responsible discussion of common ideas and problems relevant to federal healthcare. Its mission is: To increase healthcare education by providing scientific and other information to its readers; to facilitate communication; and to offer a prestige publication for members’ writings.