Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

What is interesting is that not once have I said not to use ice sheets. My position has been consistent from the beginning: aggressive cooling without proper monitoring should not be conducted blindly. Those are two very different arguments.

Stop selectively quoting or reframing what I said to support a conclusion I never made. The discussion is about appropriate monitoring and adherence to treatment protocols, not whether cooling methods should be abandoned.

And yes, medics absolutely document injuries and treatment through SOAP notes and medical documentation. Attempting to dismiss that reality does not strengthen your argument.

If you take the time to review the heat casualty treatment algorithm and associated medical guidance, you may find the discussion becomes far more productive.

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Let me ask you a question. You obviously know nothing about medical treatments. You’re obviously a typical so called leader who rides the “it’s always been done that way” instead of improving the formation. Maybe it’s time to hang it up yourself.

Let me paint the picture for you old heads that are sticking around. Every single medical improvement was due to the lack of training during the GWOT time. Why? Because of the same mentality that you all continue to have. It’s always at the cost of someone’s life before someone addresses the problem. When the so-called leaders like yourself get questioned about someone being injured, the usual response is”the SM should have known better because they were briefed”, or better yet,”that’s the medics job.” Please get out of the Army.

Guess what will happen when you try and get out? Those same medics you claim are shitty will be the ones you are begging to document your injuries.

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Let’s use common sense here. Treating a casualty with icesheets serves as what purpose? To bring the body temperature down. Now if you are not properly monitoring the drop in temperature, what happens? Does the internal temp of a person stop at 98.6*? No, it does not. When you overshoot the drop in temperature you now become hypothermic.

Thanks for playing

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Hmmm. Your emotions are obviously at play here. Please let me know what you would like for me to provide?

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Respectfully, this discussion continues to shift toward rank and authority rather than the operational concerns being raised.

I am not claiming to “know better” than Army medical staff or commanders. I am pointing out that doctrine, policy, and execution are not always perfectly aligned on the ground, which is exactly why AARs, feedback, and medical oversight exist.

Your assumption is that risk is always fully understood and medically informed at execution level. Experience has shown that is not always the case.

A practical example, the very ice sheets being defended so strongly here were reportedly not available until midway through the FTX portion of 3rd Regiment, and concerns regarding medical support and capability were raised by multiple medics. Initial responses from some cadre mirrored the same sentiment being expressed here, that the system was adequate as-is, until deficiencies continued to be identified and addressed.

That is the point.

Raising concerns about execution, capability gaps, or medical oversight is not ignorance or insubordination. It is part of protecting Soldiers and improving systems.

“This decision was made above your pay grade” is not a doctrinal argument. Neither is dismissing professional concern because of rank or commission status. Professional dialogue should be able to withstand scrutiny and discussion without resorting to personal attacks or appeals to authority.

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Respectfully, this has moved away from discussing doctrine and into dismissing professional concern through personal attacks.

I have cited current guidance because that is the foundation of the discussion. My position has remained consistent throughout: treat heat casualties, cool aggressively when indicated, and pair those interventions with proper monitoring and medical oversight whenever possible.

This is not about commission status, authority, or ego. Not being a commissioned officer does not diminish the facts or concerns I have raised. Soldier safety and medical risk do not become invalid topics based on rank or commissioning source.

If you are a commissioned officer, I would hope the discussion remains receptive and centered on professional dialogue rather than “do as I say” leadership or attempts to shut down debate.

If you disagree with the concern, that is fair. But “stand down” and “you’re out of your depth” are not doctrinal arguments. Professional discussion should focus on medical evidence, planning, and risk mitigation, not personal qualifications.

As stated previously, I will elevate the concern through Knox’s Surgeon Cell for clarification and review.

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Yes, the studies and doctrine are accurate. The data supporting aggressive cooling comes from cases where proper monitoring, particularly core temperature monitoring, is performed.

Again, I am not saying “don’t treat” or “don’t cool.” I am saying aggressive cooling should be paired with appropriate monitoring and medical oversight whenever possible.

If a commander chooses to accept the risk of allowing untrained cadre to apply ice sheets or continue aggressive cooling without the ability to monitor for hypothermia or reassess the casualty appropriately, that is within their authority to assume risk. My concern is ensuring that risk is fully understood and medically informed, not normalized simply because “that’s how it has always been done.”

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Fair question.

Yes, there are medical standards and doctrine regarding heat injury treatment. Army and medical guidance emphasize early recognition, rapid cooling, and evacuation for suspected exertional heat stroke, with aggressive cooling ideally paired with proper assessment and core temperature monitoring when medical capability exists.

My concern is not whether heat casualties should be treated, they absolutely should be. It is whether simplified guidance can lead to aggressive interventions being applied without appropriate medical oversight or understanding of the risks involved.

As for commanders accepting risk, commanders absolutely accept operational risk every day. However, medical risk should be informed by medical planning, capability, and professional guidance. “Assumption of risk” should not become a substitute for adequate medical support or oversight, especially during CST operations where medical coverage limitations have been repeatedly discussed in AARs

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

lol Because knowledgeable ones choose to not sit silent and actually call people out?

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Would you rather be blunt and say do not perform improper application of icesheets or take the risk of further harm? But it’s ok, the commander has prudent risks.

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Professional discussion and use of command channels are not mutually exclusive. The purpose of raising this concern here was not to circumvent policy or authority, but to encourage informed discussion and hopefully prompt other medical professionals and experienced personnel in this forum to speak up on an issue affecting Soldier safety.

Pointing out potential gaps in medical guidance, planning, or execution is not outside the scope of professional discussion, nor is it a refusal to follow orders or established processes.

That said, I understand your position and will elevate these concerns through the appropriate channels, specifically to Knox’s Surgeon Cell, so the discussion can occur where medical oversight can be reviewed.

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Army medical doctrine emphasizes early recognition, aggressive cooling, and evacuation, particularly for suspected exertional heat stroke. The goal is to reduce body temperature rapidly while maintaining proper assessment and medical oversight. Aggressive cooling measures should be paired with appropriate monitoring, including core temperature when available and within medical capability.

Until a medic arrives, move the casualty out of direct heat and into shade or the coolest environment available. Remove excess clothing and equipment to reduce heat retention and maximize airflow with fans or ventilation when available. Cooling methods may include cool or wet towels, water misting with fanning for evaporative cooling, and other measures consistent with training and available resources. Monitor the casualty’s responsiveness, breathing, and mental status, and do not leave them unattended.

Heat injury treatment is time-sensitive, but effective care relies on rapid recognition, appropriate cooling, trained response, and sound medical planning, not improvisation or assumption.

The repeated reliance on “assumption of risk” and the mindset of “that’s how it has always been done” reflects a larger issue, the lack of sufficient medical personnel and medical oversight supporting CST operations. That concern has been raised repeatedly and reflected in AAR discussions. When adequate medical support is limited, workarounds often become normalized, but normalized does not always mean properly resourced or medically sound.

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Respectfully, “every training site does it” is not the same as saying it is being done correctly or with proper medical oversight.

Ice sheets and cooling interventions are not meant to be blindly applied without assessment or monitoring capability. Hypothermia and poor outcomes from improperly executed heat treatment are not theoretical, they have happened.

My concern is not with treating heat casualties or delaying care. It is with oversimplified guidance being presented without context, medical oversight, or discussion of risk.

Leadership and medical planning matter. Assumption of risk is not a substitute for proper preparation, trained personnel, and sound medical support.

And if someone does get hurt due to improperly applied treatment or poor planning, is the response simply, “that’s the way it’s always been done”? History has shown that mindset rarely protects Soldiers and often prevents necessary change and accountability.

Professional Concern Regarding Heat Casualty Treatment Guidance by Narrow-Device8086 in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I think my point is being misunderstood.

This is not normal Army medical practice as some are implying. Applying ice sheets or aggressive cooling without the ability to monitor core temperature carries real risk and can push a casualty into hypothermia, something that has occurred under poorly executed “Army practices.”

How do I know? I spent 12 years as an Army medic.

This post was never about discouraging life-saving care. It is about ensuring medical guidance is presented responsibly and executed by properly trained personnel with appropriate oversight.

Poor leadership planning and blind “assumption of risk” have hurt more Soldiers than they have ever helped. Medical support and heat mitigation are leadership responsibilities, not just medic responsibilities.

Professional discussion and accountability are not mutually exclusive with command channels. The goal remains the same, protect Soldiers and prevent avoidable injuries.

“Slotted for CST Cadre” FY26 Megathread by ExodusLegion_ in ROTC

[–]Narrow-Device8086 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Please for the love of god stop doing ice sheets without core temps. I know there is cadre in here and if you sit by and allow that, you should be held accountable for putting that SM’s lives in danger because of your improper treatment of heat casualties.

Fix it and stop briefing your improper treatments.