NR Medical Training
New Member
Interested to get the views of others on here.
A lot of people in the close protection world do medical training because it is expected, sensible, or client driven, but in practice I think there is often a gap between what gets taught, what gets remembered, and what is actually likely to be used.
For us, the things that seem to matter most are not always the flashy bits. It is often the basics done well under pressure:
In reality, most people are not going to be doing advanced medicine on the side of the road. More often, it is about spotting the problem, keeping the patient alive, buying time, and handing over well.
I’d be interested to hear from those actually working in CP roles:
What medical skills or knowledge have you found most useful in the real world?
And what do you think gets overemphasised in training?
A lot of people in the close protection world do medical training because it is expected, sensible, or client driven, but in practice I think there is often a gap between what gets taught, what gets remembered, and what is actually likely to be used.
For us, the things that seem to matter most are not always the flashy bits. It is often the basics done well under pressure:
- recognising that something is going wrong early
- good patient assessment
- managing catastrophic bleeding properly
- airway positioning and basic airway management
- oxygen where appropriate and within scope
- good decisions about escalation
- staying calm and organised when the environment is far from ideal
In reality, most people are not going to be doing advanced medicine on the side of the road. More often, it is about spotting the problem, keeping the patient alive, buying time, and handing over well.
I’d be interested to hear from those actually working in CP roles:
What medical skills or knowledge have you found most useful in the real world?
And what do you think gets overemphasised in training?