The Weekly Vista

Tactical medic training comes to Bella Vista

- KEITH BRYANT kbryant@nwadg.com

The 16 participan­ts ended their class with a series of practical drills in a downpour, pulling mannequins from a tear-gas filled tent and hauling them to safety, shoving their arms into ice water to simulate working with an injury and patching up a patient while guns are going off alongside them.

“We’re going to start with the tear gas,” course coordinato­r Eric Warzecha told the class, “and it’s going to suck the rest of the way around.”

Emergency medical workers from Bella Vista, Fayettevil­le, Rogers, Springdale, Siloam Springs and Fort Smith got together in

Bella Vista to learn tactical combat casualty care, or TCCC, a program designed to teach EMS workers how to treat people in combat related situations.

The class, which had 16 students, six instructor­s and five working to become certified as instructor­s, focused on bleeding control, surgical airways, needle decompress­ion of the chest cavity, pediatric care, moving victims to safety and treating injuries in threatenin­g environmen­ts.

Bella Vista firefighte­r-paramedic William Coker said the Bella Vista Fire and Police department­s are working to be proactive and prepare for a potential shooting situation in the city.

The informatio­n in the course, he said, is based largely on medical data gathered by the Department of Defense during overseas conflicts.

“This is proven to work,” he said.

But while the course is focused on combat-related injuries, he said, the skills it focuses on could prove useful in more normal trauma situations. It also provides a chance to focus on some less frequently used skills, like opening a surgical airway.

Warzecha, who works with the Rogers Fire Department and on the Benton County Sheriff’s Office SWAT team in addition to coordinati­ng classes, said that he’s seen these techniques put into use outside of combat type situations.

“These skills that they’re learning can be used in any trauma incident,” he said. “They’re using these skills on motorcycle accidents, motor vehicle accidents, chainsaws.”

The drills, which included treating a patient over the radio, opening surgical airways, decompress­ing a patient’s chest with a needle and the aforementi­oned treatment in a hostile environmen­t stressed all these skills and got students thinking about some possibilit­ies, Warzecha said.

“It adds a realism factor,” he said. “It brings another level of care in.”

 ?? Keith Bryant/The Weekly Vista ?? Fort Smith Fire Department driver Marcus Floyd, left, works with Siloam Springs Fire Department Battalion Chief Donny Jorgensen to treat a casualty played by Fort Smith Capt. Ethan Millard while police officers fire at targets on the other side of the...
Keith Bryant/The Weekly Vista Fort Smith Fire Department driver Marcus Floyd, left, works with Siloam Springs Fire Department Battalion Chief Donny Jorgensen to treat a casualty played by Fort Smith Capt. Ethan Millard while police officers fire at targets on the other side of the...
 ?? Keith Bryant/The Weekly Vista ?? Springdale fire Capt. Zedok Crabbe demonstrat­es how much blood can be soaked up by a pair of pants and various types of bandages and gauze pads during a combat medic training course hosted by the Bella Vista Fire Department at the First Untied...
Keith Bryant/The Weekly Vista Springdale fire Capt. Zedok Crabbe demonstrat­es how much blood can be soaked up by a pair of pants and various types of bandages and gauze pads during a combat medic training course hosted by the Bella Vista Fire Department at the First Untied...
 ?? Keith Bryant/The Weekly Vista ?? Fort Smith Fire Department driver Marcus Floyd, left, works with Siloam Springs Fire Department Battalion Chief Donny Jorgensen to carry a casualty played by Fort Smith Capt. Ethan Millard to safety after applying a tourniquet. Inside the makeshift...
Keith Bryant/The Weekly Vista Fort Smith Fire Department driver Marcus Floyd, left, works with Siloam Springs Fire Department Battalion Chief Donny Jorgensen to carry a casualty played by Fort Smith Capt. Ethan Millard to safety after applying a tourniquet. Inside the makeshift...
 ?? Keith Bryant/The Weekly Vista ?? Capt. Dennis Thurman with the Rogers Fire Department, left, watches as Bella Vista Battalion Chief Robert Hamilton and firefighte­r-EMT Chris Stockton work to open a surgical airway via cricothyro­tomy, which requires an incision through the cricothyro­id...
Keith Bryant/The Weekly Vista Capt. Dennis Thurman with the Rogers Fire Department, left, watches as Bella Vista Battalion Chief Robert Hamilton and firefighte­r-EMT Chris Stockton work to open a surgical airway via cricothyro­tomy, which requires an incision through the cricothyro­id...

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