{"id":1729,"date":"2024-10-04T00:12:18","date_gmt":"2024-10-04T00:12:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/daily-bullet.com\/?p=1729"},"modified":"2024-10-04T00:12:18","modified_gmt":"2024-10-04T00:12:18","slug":"brain-injury-devices-in-focus-during-fort-liberty-soldier-touchpoint","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/daily-bullet.com\/?p=1729","title":{"rendered":"Brain Injury Devices in Focus During Fort Liberty Soldier Touchpoint"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n FORT LIBERTY, N.C. \u2014 Team members with the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Development Activity joined dozens of U.S. Army medics at Fort Liberty, North Carolina, to assess the progress of several traumatic brain injury detection devices as part of a Soldier touchpoint this week.<\/p>\n The Soldiers provided feedback on two brain trauma assessment devices currently under development at USAMMDA under the management of the Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health Project Management Office and stakeholders with the North Carolina Center for Optimizing Military Performance. The event, which included combat casualty assessment lanes inside Fort Liberty\u2019s Iron Mike Conference Center, was designed to assess the progress of TBI Field Assessment Device program and inform future program development. Feedback from prospective end users \u2014 U.S. Army medics, medical officers, and combat troops \u2014 is a vital step in development programs, according to U.S. Army Lt. Col. Dana Bal, a product manager with WRPBH.<\/p>\n \u201cThese types of end-user interfaces are vital to what we do in the WRPBH PMO,\u201d said Bal. \u201cThe information we gather \u2014 both from our own observations as advanced developers and from the critiques we get from the medics and medical officers actually using the device \u2014 is incredibly important to how we approach the development process. Our ultimate goal is to develop materiel solutions that meet the needs of the Warfighters, and we couldn\u2019t do that without these types of opportunities.\u201d<\/p>\n During the touchpoint, volunteer Soldiers from multiple units assigned to the U.S. Army\u2019s largest base conducted TBI assessments on role player casualties to determine the effectiveness of the devices in a simulated real-world environment. The event was designed to gauge the effectiveness of the TBI assessment devices to detect possible brain trauma outside a clinical environment, like those found at U.S. Army role 1 and role 2 care facilities. The Soldiers provided feedback about the devices\u2019 ease of use, design features and overall fitness for use in austere, remote environments.<\/p>\n \u201cThese development programs can last years, starting with identifying a capability gap or unmet treatment need, through design, modifications and FDA approval, and finally, fielding products to U.S. military medical providers and units, including through sustainment of these capabilities,\u201d said Bal. \u201cWith the need for rugged, reliable, user-friendly devices to aid in assessing possible TBIs, we are focusing more and more on how to meet the current and future needs of military medical providers, and hearing feedback from subject matter experts helps refine our approach.\u201d<\/p>\n Traumatic brain injuries, caused by exposure to concussive events like roadside bombs and indirect fire, are a significant threat to frontline service members. There have been more than 505,000 traumatic brain injuries reported within the Department of Defense since 2000, ranging from mild to severe. Many TBIs are not accompanied by exterior signs of injury yet can have both short and long-term health effects. In TBI cases, identifying internal injuries, like intercranial hemorrhage or other non-visible brain damage, is a vital first step to ensure injured are treated adequately across the continuum of care.<\/p>\n The WRPBH TBI assessment programs are designed to develop devices that are rugged, deployable, cost-effective and user-friendly in the hands of medical providers as close to the point-of-injury as possible. This allows the providers to shape treatment decisions before, during, and after medevac post-injury, according to U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class Andrew Procter, senior enlisted advisor for USAMMDA\u2019s Soldier Medical Devices PMO.<\/p>\n \u201cTBIs can be very hard to recognize immediately after a concussive event because there usually no visible signs of injury,\u201d said Procter, a medic with nearly 20 years of experience and multiple deployments across the globe. \u201cMedics and first responders usually focus on outward signs of injury \u2014 bleeding, burns, airways, broken bones, things that are immediately apparent after injury \u2014 to stabilize a patient before medevac. Because determining the severity of TBIs requires specialized screenings and imaging devices, it\u2019s tough to accurately diagnose the severity and type of brain injury in a field environment. But what we are doing now, what the WRPBH team is focusing on, will hopefully give future medics and first responders a way to recognize TBIs and assess their severity before evacuation decisions are even arranged.\u201d<\/p>\n
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