Good-bye to Bastion
As coalition forces pulled out of Camp Bastion, Afghanistan, on 26 October, the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) reflected on the work carried out by its medics in support of troops.
Main image: A casualty is tended to onboard a Chinook helicopter following an engagement with the enemy in Afghanistan (Sgt Alison Baskerville RLC / UK Crown copyright)
As coalition forces pulled out of Camp Bastion, Afghanistan, on 26 October, handing over the base in Helmand Province to the Afghan Security Forces, the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) reflected on the work carried out by its medics in support of troops – in particular the medical emergency response teams (MERTs).
For injured personnel, treatment often started on the front line with immediate emergency first aid from combat medical technicians and MERTs, who rescued casualties just after injury. At Bastion’s Role 3 Hospital, injured personnel received treatment so advanced that over the last eight years it became one of the world’s leading trauma care facilities, said the MoD. And for the most seriously injured, who often required intensive life support, there were the critical care air support teams who evacuated patients back to the UK onboard a specially adapted RAF transport plane – often within hours of being injured.
The closure of the Role 3 Hospital last month marked a special moment in the history of the provision of medical care to injured personnel. Lt Col Jaish Mahan, commanding officer of UK Medical Group, said: “The campaign in Afghanistan, for us as medics, has been the defining operation of our military generation. It has catapulted us to the forefront of battlefield trauma care worldwide. Huge medical advances have been achieved, with a survival rate unrivalled in history.”
Some of those advances – like the use of a special tourniquet that helps to stem blood loss faster, and the ‘intraosseous injection’, which allows blood to be transfused straight into bone marrow – are now used in the civilian National Health Service (NHS) back in the UK, noted the MoD. The Ministry added that most of the medical personnel who deployed to Bastion also work in the NHS, many of them being reservists who work full time in Britain’s hospitals.
Lt Col Mahan continued: “Our relationship with the NHS is something that we are very proud of. That interface is really important. It means that our people keep up-to-date with what’s happening in the NHS in terms of trauma skills. But also the advances that we have developed out here across this campaign are fed back into the NHS.”
A key part of the medical success in Afghanistan was the MERT, said the MoD. Each team consists of two paramedics, a medical consultant and a nurse, meaning the best expertise is available straight away. Typically working out of a Chinook helicopter adapted to be a fully equipped mobile resuscitation room, complete with a blood supply for in-flight transfusions, the MERTs rescued injured personnel from the front line – sometimes coming under fire themselves while doing so. Lt Col Paul Reavley, clinical director of MERT training and a veteran of three Afghan tours, commented: “We have developed the capability to treat personnel with serious chest or head injuries, to resuscitate them on the Chinook and provide the kind of anaesthetic and surgical capability we would in a hospital emergency department. Patients that would previously not have been expected to survive, we are now routinely able to save. Many of the techniques we have learned in Afghanistan are now being used by the emergency services here in the UK.”
The UK’s aircraft were also employed in the treatment of mental, rather than physical, conditions, said the MoD. Trauma risk management was established across the British military footprint in Afghanistan to teach non-medical personnel to spot the subtle signs of mental distress and illness in their colleagues. It encouraged troops to talk about their problems and seek help from a team of community psychiatric nurses and consultant psychiatrists on hand in Afghanistan. If necessary, personnel could then be flown back to the UK at short notice and helped at one of the Ministry’s 15 Departments of Community Mental Health.
The MoD added that UK medics also worked to develop the medical capability of the Afghan National Army (ANA), which now operates its own military trauma facility at Camp Shorabak next to Bastion, and has taken full responsibility for evacuating its own casualties by helicopter and treating them at their new facility.
The last remaining UK mentor, Major Harry Wallace, who helped train ANA personnel before the UK Forces’ departure from Helmand, said: “I stayed here to the end just in case they had any problems, but I am delighted to say they haven’t. They have set up a good facility with good people and good systems.”
The MoD concluded: “Perhaps the most enduring medical legacy of the British Armed Forces’ time in Bastion is how the techniques and processes developed there will help future missions. No matter where in the world serving personnel are asked to serve in the future, the lessons learned in Afghanistan will ensure they will receive the best possible medical support.”