WarDocs - The Military Medicine Podcast
Health & Fitness:Medicine
Col (Ret) Patrick Osborn, MD - Military and Civilian Cooperation: Improving Amputation Care and Maintaining Critical Wartime Surgical Skills
Military Medicine & WarDocs present: "A Ready Medical Force Special Collection"
MILMED-D-21-00551: “Impact of Civilian Patient Care on Major Amputation Case Volume in the Military Health System”
EPISODE SUMMARY
Discover the critical aspects of maintaining wartime surgical skills, especially major amputation surgery, in this thought-provoking conversation with retired Air Force Colonel and Orthopedic Trauma Surgeon, Dr. Patrick Osborn. We dive into his paper, Impact of Civilian Patient Care on Major Amputation Case Volume in the Military Health System and uncover the importance of partnerships between military and civilian providers in increasing surgical case volume and sustaining essential wartime skills. Understand the challenges medical professionals face in managing patients with potential amputations and the crucial role of direct patient care experience in honing their skills.
Join us as we explore the ways military medicine can enhance amputation care through MILCIV partnerships, combining the skillsets of military and civilian medical personnel to improve patient outcomes. Learn about the next research study in this area and why connecting patient outcomes to a medical professional's skills is vital. Don't miss this vital discussion with Dr. Patrick Osborn on the importance of his paper and the life-saving benefits of military and civilian collaboration in amputation care.
EPISODE CHAPTERS
(0:00:01) - Wartime Major Amputation Surgery Skills
(0:10:16) - Enhancing Amputation Care in Military Medicine
EPISODE CHAPTER SUMMARIES
(0:00:01) - Wartime Major Amputation Surgery Skills (10 Minutes)
We explore the challenges of sustaining critical wartime skills during inter-war periods and how major amputation surgery skills are commonly required during wartime. Dr. Osborn discusses the importance of partnerships between military and civilian institutions to increase major amputation surgical case volume and sustain wartime skills. We learn about the specialties expected to manage patients that may have indications for amputations in a down-range setting, and the percentage of the group of deploying surgeons that actually performed major amputations down-range. We also discuss why direct patient care experience is important, and why coursework and simulation are currently insufficient to cover the procedural experience gap.
(0:10:16) - Enhancing Amputation Care in Military Medicine (8 Minutes)
We discuss ways to get more exposure and experience to the acute phase of traumatic amputations and the importance of MILCIV partnerships. We look at the next research study in this area and the importance of connecting patient outcomes to the skillset of medical personnel. Finally, we discuss why this paper is important and why someone should take the time to read it.
EPISODE KEYWORDS
Military Medicine, Amputation Surgery, Wartime Skills, Major Amputation Case Volume, Civilian Patient Care, MILCIV Partnerships, Traumatic Amputations, Procedural Experience, Acute Phase, Patient Outcomes, Training Medical Personnel
#Military #Medical #Podcast #WarDocs #Orthopedics ##Surgeon #SurgicalTeams #MilitaryMedicine #Readiness #Training #Amputation
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