Military, Civilian, and Rural Application of the Damage Control Philosophy

Abstract
Damage control surgery is a useful salvage strategy for the most critically injured patients. Conceptually, this approach to individual patients can be extrapolated to situations such as military field surgery, civilian mass casualty events, and long-range transfers from rural areas. The logistic realities of Army forward surgery teams are addressed with regard to typical damage control maneuvers and evacuation. Specific areas requiring improvement through directed research are identified. Initial civilian mass casualty strategies are discussed, and a plan to prevent transfer delays of rural trauma patients is presented. By transferring the lessons learned from individual damage control patients to military, civilian mass casualty, and rural casualty events, resource utilization is optimized. The concept of minimal acceptable care rather than optimal trauma care can be applied to these three seemingly different situations.