Miles Casualty Cards Rating: 8,9/10 4826 reviews

Casualty Cards - Download as PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or read online. Army Miles Casualty Cards.pdf Free Download Here. Incorporating MILES casualty cards into Soldiers’ everyday training serves as a continuous re-enforcement. Buy Combat Casualty Reference Cards on Amazon.com FREE SHIPPING on qualified orders.

  1. Miles Casualty Cards Printable 2017

In any event, this casualty card had multiple injuries on it, as though the victim had been blown up by something. Per the card, he was basically a trunk with four bloody stumps left, and some serious thoracic/abdominal injuries to accompany it.

Free download film subtitle indonesia. Download Anime Bleach Full Episode Sub Indo Mkv. Link Download Anime Bleach Episode 1. Download dan Streaming Anime Bleach Episode 1-366 Subtitle Indonesia. Download Bleach Batch Full Episode Subtitle Indonesia. Sinopsis: Bercerita tentang Ichigo Kurosaki, seorang pelajar SMA yang memiliki kemampuan untuk melihat roh, dan juga Rukia Kuchiki, seorang shinigami (dewa kematian) yang pada suatu hari bertemu dengan Ichigo sewaktu sedang memburu roh jahat yang disebut hollow. Bleach all episode subtitle Indonesia 1-366 Lengkap. MP4, MKV, [480p]. Dan juga saya meminta izin mengshare link download bleach subtitle indonesia pada blog. Bleach batch Sub Indo full episode mkv mp4 hd lengkap dari episode 1-366 indowebster rar, streaming download Sinopsis: Tokoh utama dalam Bleach adalah. Download Bleach Batch Subtitle Indonesia Batch dalam format Mkv 480P, Mkv 720P, Download Bleach Batch Subtitle. One Piece Episode 001 – 825 Batch Subtitle Indonesia.

Miles Casualty Cards Printable 2017

A bunch of people had to actually go through what Graves and Registration has to do with a body. Guess they have to train too.

The TAAF says you're fucked. Your driver is gonna have to be MEDEVAC'd back to the hospital, and you guys have got 30 minutes to make it happen before he's DOA for the battle.' Cue the profanity. I gave his driver that card because I figured he'd only use the card if the track got taken down.

Instead, one of the platoon's 'cruits shot his ass as he came back in from taking a shit the night before the big force-on-force battle. They didn't have a spare driver, either, so the LT had to ride with a squad. Very unhappy campers. A SEAL sniper shot me in the neck from atop a high ridge line while other members of his team were attacking the village we were defending.

Won the Hero of Hohenfels Award for a rotation in 1993 as a Scout with 2-70 Armor, 3ID. Spent many many months at Hohenfels, and then late in my career I was stationed there as an Ops NCOIC. That place could get snow in August; had it's own weather system, and cruel on troops in the field. WE never had any Cold weather casualties in our Scout Platoons however. That was either our training or the fact that if you were an NCO and one of your soldiers got a cold weather injury it was you ass not his that got fried.

My worst experience was in 1990 in Hohensfels. I was gone about 3 or 4 full days in the dead of winter. I never huddled up next to so many perfect strangers in my life. They had real world cold weather casualties as well.

They didn't see us move in earlier that night so attacked the far side of the village giving us clear shots to take a few out. Somebody threw a smoke grenade into my building which had hundreds of bags of sawdust (emulating a fertilizer factory smuggling chemical weapons) so the building went up in flames fast. I dove out a window and was shooting at the SEALS and Army SF on the ground not realizing a sniper was performing overwatch from the ridge.

Ironic thing? The guy who I gave that card to was a victim of a blue-on-blue, where his buddy accidentally shot him with a single blank from an M16. That 'friendly fire' thing? One single shot from an M16 supposedly tore off all four limbs, and penetrated his chest and abdomen.'

I figured with pre-made cards you wouldn't have to spend time writing things down you just come in have a card and go with it. Same if your doing it outside with the trucks or whatever. Get hit have some casualties take out the cards and respond. I know the.mil uses them for force on force training but my google foo seems to be weak today.

I'll never forget one poor guy that was screaming in pain when his frozen foot started to thaw out. I was a no TIS/TIG snot nosed grunt and learned about staying warm during that one winter. Those painful lessons were hard learned and have been shared with hundreds of troops over a 20 year period. I bet that poor guy lost his foot. Well now you're taking! I did tours in Germany in the 11th ACR, 8th ID, 1st AD, 2nd ACR, and 3ID over the years.

If I get detailed with guys like this (and I have), I put them on litter teams.

Each Triage Training Card presents signs or symptoms and vital signs with a photograph on one side for the training audience. The reverse side details the appropriate response and triage category. The MESH Patient Triage Cards are: • Easy to use • Realistic Situations • Standardized color coded system • Set includes: 80 cards • Each set individually packaged 'They were very easy to use and realistic.' -Nancy Region 1 South Dakota 'I use them to teach TNCC and for ambulance education.' -Hope Region 2 South Dakota *For orders greater than 10, please contact us at info@meshcoalition.org for pricing and shipping information.

The MESH Patient Triage Cards is a realistic triage training aid to medical and non-medical professionals and incorporates principles of START Triage. Designed from the start to mimic the type of injuries seen in mass casualty incidents.

Feel free to tweak, but I went with the following ratios: • Buddy Aid: 10% • Medic: 30% • Aid Station: 20% • Dead: 40% Additionally, I pretty much just made up how many cards would be conscious or unconscious weighting conscious toward “buddy aid” and unconscious toward “aid station” with “medic being pretty even. Again, feel free to tweak.

Cara memperbaiki file excel 2010 yang corrupt. Biasanya file excel di proteksi untuk melindungi rumus atau konten file dari perubahan baik yang di sengaja ataupun tidak. Sering menemukan file excel yang di proteksi seperti ini? Memang menyebalkan.

When Someone Else Takes a Hit It’s in your best interests (i.e. More firepower) to go help them.

'Yeah, player unit has a problem with that.' 'OK, I'll tell them.'

You're looking for cards with injuries listed on them so the responders will know what they are responding to? Sorry, I'm slow on the uptake this morning.This part. Basically we have been doing a round robin where you have a casualty in the room you walk in and you have injuries written on a white board and you treat those injuries.

All you need to do is take a look at their wound card. If it says “buddy aid” then help them to their feet, grab their rifle for ’em, and watch their back as you both reenter the battle When Your Card Says “Dead”. Sorry, You are Dead You have two options: • Play Dead • Scream and carry-on about some obviously mortal wound with the false hope that an aidman might evacuate you to a field hospital Not an option: • Talk, move disruptively.

Was blue alive or was it yellow. Before a battle whoever was reenacting as the medic would pass out small envelopes to each soldier.

Miles

I have broken that rule and done rifleman on occasion, but I have all the gear and stuff to do airborne, leg, and corpsman impressions as needed. New guys to our unit come in as riflemen only. As an aid man re-enactor, nothing gets me more angry than to see a bunch of guys who don’t know how to do the impression correctly “sporting the brassard” to allow them to participate.

Those envelopes were to go — unopened — into your first aid pouch. If you took a hit from the enemy (and this would depend on your organizations Rules of Engagement and no doubt results in arguments) — you would fall, sit, or otherwise take yourself “out of action” and signify your “death” by taking off your helmet. At this point — if you have a possibility of living — again, depending on your ROE — you could scream and cry for “medic” as much as you wanted hoping that he would come around. When the medic arrived, he would open up your envelope and the card would either be “dead” or “alive.” Our medic used an UNO deck. If you were alive, put your helmet on and rejoin the action.

Which means for every dead card there are 1.45 Alive cards. In WWII, for each American death there were approximately 2.6 wounded. But that number takes into account hospital admissions. When you take a hit, pull out your wound card and examine it. If you are dead: – Please do not talk or walk around while the battle is progressing, it is extremely distracting to other individuals. Instead sit or lay tight until the battle has passed.

First time we had these was early 89. I was issued a head wound, but not KIA.

During the battle, I dismounted to pull security, and get into a shooting match with a couple Opfor. 2 days later my Plt.

It cured in about a 40degree arc (125+ yards from shooter to me) and took me right between the eyes as we started the assault. Lol New paintball players do this all the time. They don't believe the ball could actually hit them from that range, but it looks neat so they watch it. The fixation makes you subconsciously move it to the center of your vision, aaaaaaaand. *splat* Protip: Yes, you do need to dodge the longballs.

Each soldier gets one card per battle to be placed in their first aid pouch. See below for some additional details on setting this up, including printable cards When you are Wounded Take your hit, remove your helmet to signify you are out of action and take out the card from your first aid pouch. First off, you are either fully aware that you are hurt or you are knocked out cold. In the former situation you can scream your head off for medic, maybe crawl around a little bit, etc. In the latter the most you can do is some small groans, moans, or coughing. You are Injured Secondly, there are three levels of aid that you may require: Buddy Aid, Medic, or Aid Station.

• 5 Great price Posted by Carlos huerta on This pack is great you get casualty cards a sharpie and a aloksak bag can't beat it for the value. • 4 Great VALUE!

We wedged pieces of cardboard between the transmitter and rifle barrel and then wrapped them tight with 100 MPH tape to make them so tight they wouldn't move, and zeroed them with SAAFs. Blufor units usually didn't bother making them secure so to them.MILES sucked. We even used our own scopes.damn accurate. View Quote Not sure about now, but at JRTC in late 80's/early 90's yes. They were hot and heavy to maintain the integrity of JRTC so any violations of OPFOR ROE were grounds for an Article-15 to include opening your own casualty card, removing batteries from MILES gear, or tapping transmitters (transmitters fired by sensing back pressure from firing a blank round using a small exposed diaphragm. Tapping the diaphragm with your finger would fire the laser. Using night vision, such as PVS-5's, you could actually see the laser so could shoot targets without making any noise exposing your position).

• Buddy Aid: If one of your fellow reenactors (friend or foe) decides to help you, that is all that is required. • Medic: A medic is required in order to return you to the battle • Aid Station: You must be evacuated to an aid station by a medic to regroup before you are allowed back in the battle. Note that in my system, I wanted to provide maximum incentive for reenactors to stop and help out their wounded. In my system if someone had “aid station” checked, but had a buddy with them, the medic could “downgrade” the card from “aid station” to “medic” thus returning them to battle immediately. I realize that that just adds all sorts of confusion to the mix, though.

Comes yelling for me telling me I'm dead. Evidently my ITV was hit, and we were taken off the field. Because I didn't go to the injury stuff, I was now KIA. Well that turned into a 24 hour pain in the ass. Was told I would be back in a few hours.

These cards don’t tell you that you have a “fractured left femur with a partially severed whatever.” Not all medics are real-life medics, anyway. • Elicit some level of care from your fellow soldiers rather than them just moving on • Get somewhat close to mimicking real battle casualty odds How my System Works Basic Set-up I created — for my organization — 53 cards for the weekend. Obviously your numbers may vary, but you want to create a set amount for the entire weekend with a ratio of about 1.5 “alive” cards to every “dead” card. In my case, this worked out to be 32 “alive” and 21 “dead.” Note that because you made a set amount for the weekend, the ratio for each battle is different. In WWII, for each American death there were approximately 2.6 wounded, but that includes hospital admissions. These cards are placed in small envelopes — don’t seal, you can reuse them — and those envelopes are placed shuffled.

Filling out the cards Also, you’ll need to fill out the “alive” cards. I recommend printing the appropriate number and checking the appropriate boxes.

There’s nothing stopping a medic that wanted a “more involved” tactical to write some notes on the wound cards before handing them out Were you a medic at that event, or a regular Joe? What did you think? I was a regular leg at that event.

Lol New paintball players do this all the time. They don't believe the ball could actually hit them from that range, but it looks neat so they watch it. The fixation makes you subconsciously move it to the center of your vision, aaaaaaaand. *splat* Protip: Yes, you do need to dodge the longballs. I never saw it coming.only one guy was shooting at the time and they could not figure out how the hell the round hit me.

*** Black version also available on ** Active shooter events require the fastest possible deployment of key medical supplies. The Active Shooter Event Casualty Response Kit is designed to deliver the most critical 'point of wounding' supplies to First Responders prior to the arrival of Fire Rescue or EMS. Blaze Orange gloves and an orange CAT Tourniquet identify the responder as such, and are easily seen once deployed. An external glove pouch and two external tourniquet holders provide instant access to important tools without opening the bag. Also mounted outside the bag is a pair of 7½' EMT Shears. Shoulder strap and carry handles allow easy on-scene transport options, and internal organizer pockets can accommodate additional supplies if desired. CONTENTS 4 Pair Nitrile Gloves, Large (Blaze Orange) 1 QuikLitter 4 C-A-T Tourniquet (Orange) - GENERATION 7 2 SWAT-T Tourniquet 3 Halo Chest Seal (twin pack) 1 7.5' EMT Stealth Shears 4 Compressed Gauze 2 Trauma Dressing (4') 2 Trauma Dressing (6') 8 Casualty Cards w / Marker, in Aloksak 2 N95 Mask Dimensions: 8' H x 12' W x 8' D Weight: 4.25 lbs Suggested addition for qualified personnel: Hemostatic Agents To ensure best quality and timely delivery, we may substitute items in our kits and modules with products of equal or better quality.

Downloadable Materials • – PDF • – PDF Casualty SOP: This went out in an email before the battle and was reiterated before passing out the cards: Casualty SOP: – It is a bit different than you veteran types will remember. Here’s how it works. There are 53 cards for the weekend out there. 32 of them are “up” cards, 21 are “dead” cards.

Originally Posted By primuspilum: Mine? Got the dreaded groin card. No female medics for my simulated wound. Remember these: while doing a 12 hour training op.I got shot by what was literally a 'curving' bullet in the opening seconds of the event and got to sleep for the whole time the bullet was a sim round (we used both sim rounds and miles gear) that was being fired at a car from a 2 story window.

It was weird and neat at the same time. They went through every step in the processing of a fallen soldier. View Quote They're issued out and tracked by your unit's Observer/Controller, when it's done right. He puts them into these little itty-bitty manila envelopes, and seals them, after writing your name on the card so you can't trade the damn things on him. Do that, and you're probably going to spend a day or so strapped to a backboard at his behest, 'cos you can do that shit when you're the O/C. I think the worst injury I ever saw on a MILES casualty card came on one of batches of test cards they did up at the NTC--The medics were agitating for more fidelity to real-world injuries, and they wanted better 'play' for the medical field, so they did up some new cards to enable all that. Only lasted one rotation, and they dropped the idea like a hot potato because it was eating up too much time.

All in all some of the best training I ever endured was at Hohenfels. Glad to meet someone else who shivered from the same weather as me.

I met the sniper who shot me. MILES gear is damn accurate if mounted and zeroed properly.

This entry was posted on 27.02.2019.