Development and Implementation of a Standard Operating Procedure for Military Working Dog Blood Collection, Storage, and Transport.

Q3 Medicine
Elizabeth L Evernham, Benjamin T Fedeles, Kayla Knuf
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Military working canines are critical assets and force multipliers for the Joint Force. Most often deployed forward of Role 2 assets, they are reliant on non-veterinary resources when wounded, ill, or injured in an operational environment. Hemorrhagic shock is the most prevalent form of shock seen in battlefield injuries and is most effectively treated with whole blood transfusion. Dogs cannot be transfused with human blood and there is no formal Department of Defense (DoD) canine blood product distribution system to operational settings. A walking blood bank is helpful when multiple dogs are geographically co-located and the resource can be provided to an injured patient quickly. In areas as widely dispersed as the Horn of Africa, the likelihood of co-location is slim and delaying this vital resource can mean the difference between life and death. Therefore, personnel at the Role 2 facility in Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti, filled a critical capability gap for the operational area by producing a local canine whole blood bank with distribution to multiple countries. This protocol can be replicated by other locations to improve medical readiness for the working canines who serve to maintain DoD Force Protection.

制定并实施《军用工作犬血液采集、储存和运输标准操作程序》。
军用工作犬是联合部队的重要资产和战斗力倍增器。它们通常部署在角色 2 资产的前方,在作战环境中受伤、生病或受伤时,需要依赖非兽医资源。失血性休克是战场伤员最常见的休克形式,输注全血是最有效的治疗方法。狗不能输人血,国防部(DoD)也没有正式的犬类血液制品分发系统。如果多只警犬在同一地点,而且可以迅速为受伤病人提供资源,那么步行血库就会很有帮助。在非洲之角这样分散的地区,共同驻扎的可能性很小,延误这一重要资源可能意味着生死之别。因此,吉布提莱蒙尼尔营地角色 2 设施的工作人员通过建立当地犬类全血库,并将其分发给多个国家,填补了行动区的关键能力空白。其他地方也可效仿这一协议,以改善为维护国防部部队保护而工作的警犬的医疗准备状态。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
91
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