CHS Leaders’ Reference Card

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Evacuation Request Procedures. Evacuation2Evacuation Request Procedures Evacuation begins when medical personnel receive injured or ill soldiers and continues.
Advertisements

Tactical (Combat) Orders
Tactical Operations Orders
Application of the Troop Leading Procedures
VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE NCO ACADEMY
Risk Management Introduction Risk Management Fundamentals
Tasks Familiarize the Commander’s SITREP and 9 line medevac casualty evacuation request formats Perform Visual Signal Techniques.
LZ / PZ RECONNAISSANCE An LZ and/or PZ reconnaissance is an area reconnaissance performed to determine the suitability for air assault operations of a.
Company Level Evacuation and Recovery Team (CLEAR)
REFERENCES FM 7-8, Infantry Rifle Platoon & Squad.
CASUALTY EVACUATION OPERATIONS
NINE LINE MEDEVAC AND HLZ/PZ MARKING
9 Line MEDEVAC Instructor: SSG Rosales
WARRIOR TRAINING CENTER The Sked Rescue System Primary Use: Ground Evacuations, sit down missions, water rescue and hoist extractions. Tensile Strength:
L E A D E R S H I P E X C E L L E N C E INFANTRY PLATOON TACSOP U.S. ARMY CADET COMMAND Warrior Forge DISTRIBUTION RESTRICTION: APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE;
Squad Tactics- Ambush.
TROOP LEADING PROCEDURES FM 7-8
TROOP LEADING PROCEDURES
Troop Leading Procedures
TROOP LEADING STEPS CPL PURPOSE It provides you a structured format to help you develop plans.. Used by all levels of command.. They help you to.
REQUEST MEDICAL EVACUATION
REQUESTMEDICALEVACUATION TSP 081-T Line 1 - Location of the pickup site Line 2 - Radio frequency, call sign, and suffix Line 3 - Number of patients.
REQUEST MEDICAL EVACUATION
Request Medical Evacuation (MEDEVAC)
Squad Tactics-Attack.
SITREP/SPOTREP Task: Perform SITREP/SPOTREP
Patrolling. Agenda Unit OrganizationUnit Organization Common Hand & Arm SignalsCommon Hand & Arm Signals MovementMovement Actions at Danger AreasActions.
RISK MANAGEMENT WORKSHEET WEAPON HAZARDS - Playing with weapon SENSITIVE ITEM HAZARDS -loss of weapon LIGHT / WEATHER HAZARDS -hot weather injury -rain.
Call for Fire.
Selecting and fighting
Overall Classification: UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY 8 September 2015 TRI-CRAB 14 LT Kuhn, HMC Smith, HM2 Egly, HM3 Ramirez, HM3 Burnett.
# 1 SOLDIERS MANUAL COMMON TASKS (STP 21-1-SMCT) Prepared by Expert Field Medical Badge Test Control Office.
CHS Leaders’ Reference Card

Combat Orders 1 Combat Orders Provide Information For The Planning And Execution Of Combat Operations. All Combat Orders Direct A Task And Purpose To The.
Triage. Objectives Given casualties and no other medical assets, decide which casualty needs medical care first. Describe how to : –Prioritize injuries.
Terrain Analysis.
TYPES OF ORDERS ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER: COVERS NORMAL ADMINISTRATIVE OPERATIONS IN GARRISON OR IN THE FIELD. THEY INCLUDE GENERAL, SPECIFIC, & MEMORANDUM.
Break Contact By: SGT Russman Reference: FM ; Ranger Handbook.
9 LINE MEDIVAC Your squad has just been hit by Indirect fire and you take on 3 casualties in the middle of know where. How can I get these soldiers back.
Multi-National Brigade (East)
REF: FM 7-8 INFANTRY RIFLE PLATOON AND SQUAD MANUAL
SSG VARGAS, WILLIAM SGT(P) OWENS, BRIAN ARCTIC ENFORCERS 164 TH MP COMPANY FT. RICHARDSON, AK
REQUEST MEDICAL EVACUATION
Operations Study Guide. Categories OF Orders ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER: Covers normal administrative operations in garrison or in the field. They include general,
National Training Center
Lecture on Casualty Triage
Military Intelligence
Breaking Contact B Trp 7-10 CAV 4ID Reference Material
Patrolling and Patrol Bases
Policy-driven Service Composition and Data Sharing in a Coalition Scenario with Trust and Obfuscation ACITA 2012 Demonstration.
Combat Life Saver Module
RTO PROCEDURES SFC Norvell.
Leaders Reference Principles of Leadership
The MDMP Process MDMP Inputs MDMP Outputs Step 1 MDMP Inputs Step 5
Tactical Combat Casualty Care for Medical Personnel August 2018 (Based on TCCC-MP Guidelines ) Next we will discuss Casualty Collection Point Operations.
We will now continue the scenario that we began in Care Under Fire.
Plan Security for a Command Post (CP)
TROOP LEADING PROCEDURES
CHS Leaders’ Reference Card
164TH MP COMPANY FT. RICHARDSON, AK ARCTIC ENFORCERS.
TYPES OF ORDERS ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER: COVERS NORMAL ADMINISTRATIVE OPERATIONS IN GARRISON OR IN THE FIELD. THEY INCLUDE GENERAL, SPECIFIC, & MEMORANDUM.
CHS Leaders’ Reference Card
PATROLLING AND PATROL BASES
TROOP LEADING PROCEDURES
This is a MOVEMENT TO CONTACT that
REF: FM 7-8 INFANTRY RIFLE PLATOON AND SQUAD MANUAL
TROOP LEADING PROCEDURE
Presentation transcript:

CHS Leaders’ Reference Card AMEDD LESSONS LEARNED PRINCIPLES OF CHS (FM 4-02.6) 1. Conformity 2. Continuity 3. Control 4. Proximity 5. Flexibility 6. Mobility 9 – LINE MEDEVAC REQUEST (FM 8-10-6) Line 1- Location of pickup site Line 2- Radio call sign & frequency Line 3- # of patients by precedence a. Urgent b. Urgent (surgical) c. Priority d. Routine e. Convenience Line 4- Special equipment needed a. None b. Hoist c. Extraction equipment d. Ventilator Line 5- # of patients by type L- # of Litter patients A- # of Ambulatory patients Line 6- Security of pickup site (war) N- No enemy troops in area P- Possible enemy troops in area E- Enemy troops in area X- Enemy troops in area Line 6- Number and type of wound injury or illness (peace) Line 7- Method of marking at HLZ a. Panels b. Pyro c. smoke d. None e. Other Line 8- Patient Nationality & Status a. US Military b. US Civilian c. Non US Military d. Non US Civilian e. EPW Line 9- NBC (war) N- Nuclear B- Biological C- Chem Line 9- Terrain description (peace) CHS Leaders’ Reference Card https://lessonslearned.amedd.army.mil/ AMEDD BATTLEFIELD RULES (FM 4-02.6) 1. Maintain medical presence with the soldier 2. Maintain health of the command 3. Save lives 4. Clear the battlefield 5. Provide state-of-the-art care 6. Return soldiers to duty as soon as possible TROOP LEADING PROCEDURES (FM 7-8) 1. Receive mission 2. Issue warning order 3. Make a tentative plan 4. Start movement 5. Reconnoiter 6. Complete the plan 7. Issue the plan 8. Supervise SPOT REPORT S- Size A- Activity L- Location U- Unit/Uniform T- Time E- Equipment CHS FUNCTIONAL AREAS 1. C4I (FM 4-02.6) 2. Medical Treatment 3. Evacuation & Med Regulating 4. Hospitalization 5. Combat Health Logistics 6. Dental Services 7. Veterinary Services 8. Preventive Medicine 9. Combat Stress Control 10. Medical Laboratory Services METT-TC ANALYSIS (FM 7-8) 1. Mission 2. Enemy 3. Terrain 4. Troops 5. Time 6. Civilians MILITARY ASPECTS OF TERRAIN (OCOKA) (FM 7-8) 1. Observation & Fields of Fire 2. Cover & Concealment 3. Obstacles 4. Key Terrain 5. Avenues of Approach OPORD FORMAT (FM 101-5) TASK ORGANIZATION: 3. EXECUTION: (Intent) 1. SITUATION: (Enemy/Friendly) Concept of Operation / Concept of Support 2. MISSION: (Task & Purpose) 4. SERVICE & SUPPORT: who, what, when, where, why 5. COMMAND & SIGNAL:

X “INVERTED - Y” HLZ (FM 90-4) Left leg light Direction of Flight HLZ LANDING CRITERIA (FM 90-4) 1. Clear of debris / obstacles marked 2. Land heading into the wind 3. VS-17 Panels / bean bag lights properly secured 4. Cleared diameter for UH-60 = 50m Cleared diameter for CH-47 = 80m 5. Avoid landing down-slope 6. Do not land on slope >16 degrees *To determine ground slope use the following math computation V x 57.3 H “V” is found by subtracting lowest point on HLZ from highest point “H” is the entire length of the HLZ Direction of Flight 7 meters TOUCHDOWN X 14 meters 7 meters Base Directional light 7 meters Direction of Wind Right leg light V = Vertical Distance H = Horizontal Distance EVAC CAPABILITIES (FM 8-10-6) Type Litter Amb M996 2 6 M997 4 8 M113 4 10 5-ton 12 16 2 ½-ton 12 16 UH-60 (w/o hoist) 6 7 (w / hoist) 3 4 CH-47 24 31 C-130 74 92 C-141 48 170 C-5 70 C-17A 36 54 AAR FORMAT (TC 25-20) 1. What was the plan 2. What actually happened 3. Why did it happen 4. Unit strengths and weaknesses 5. How can we improve FIVE-POINT CONTINGENCY PLAN ( handbook) 1. GOING- Where LDR or element is going 2. OTHERS- Others going 3. TIME- Time to be gone 4. WHAT- What to do if LDR or element does not return in time 5. ACTIONS- Actions on enemy contact, you and me NBC-1 CHEM REPORT (FM 3-3) Line B- Position of observer Line D- DTG of detonation Line E- DTG end of attack Line F- Location of attack Line G- Means of delivery Line H- Type of burst (air or surface) & agent RISK MANAGEMENT (FM 100-14) 1. Identify Hazards 2. Assess Hazards to Determine Risks 3. Develop Controls and Make Risk Decisions 4. Implement Controls 5. Supervise & Evaluate WPNs (FM 7-8) Max E Range(m) M-4/16A2 580 (pt) 800 (area) M-249 600 (pt) 800 (area) M-203 150 (pt) 350 (area) M-136 (AT-4) 300 (pt / area) M-9 (9mm pistol) 50 (pt) M-2 (50 Cal) 1,800 (grazing) EPWs 1. Search 2. Segregate 3. Silence 4. Speed 5. Safeguard To help you- Conserve the Fighting Strength