Jokingly....I have to say I agree with them... ;D
In reality....WTF? My comments to follow.
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/War_Terror/2007/04/11/pf-3982853.html
April 11, 2007
Military says only brightest soldiers should have advanced first-aid training
By MURRAY BREWSTER
OTTAWA (CP) - As the casualties in Afghanistan mount, the army wants many more soldiers trained in highly realistic battlefield first aid, but military doctors are resisting.
A recent report into a friendly-fire incident, in which an American plane accidentally strafed Canadian troops in Afghanistan last September, recommended more soldiers be qualified in this specialized care, a step above the standard combat first-aid course given to all troops deployed overseas.
"This incident illustrates the requirement to have as many soldiers as possible . . . qualified," said the document, obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act.
"The training is considered critical given the (combat operating environment). Combat first aid should be a consideration like firepower when considering the building blocks of the forces."
The Sept. 9 report recommended that two soldiers in each section be trained in combat casualty care to help save lives. Currently, the army requires only one soldier per section to be certified in advanced battlefield first aid, known as Tactical Combat Casualty Care.
The need for first-aid training came brutally into focus Easter Sunday with the roadside bombing that killed six soldiers and injured four others. One of the wounded - Cpl. Shaun Fevens - managed to instruct another soldier on what to do in order to save Fevens' own life.
The friendly fire review, completed in the immediate aftermath of the Labour Day incident that killed one soldier and wounded 36 others, has since been greeted with skepticism by Ottawa-based medical staff.
All soldiers heading into war zones receive combat related first-aid training, a two-day course on how to stop bleeding, apply bandages and tourniquets and use QuickClot, a powder that quickly dries up bleeding.
The proposal to put more troops through the advanced two-week course has been endorsed by army brass, saying it benefits all ranks, not just non-commissioned officers to whom the program is currently restricted.
"This would allow the army to build a critical mass of qualified soldiers" in order to make it part of regular career training for combat arms soldiers, says an Oct. 3 memo from Land Forces Command.
But the director of the military's health services branch, Col. Maureen Haberstock, has criticized the proposal, saying combat casualty care is training that should be reserved for "exceptional" soldiers.
"Some of the skills taught, if performed unnecessarily or incorrectly can be harmful, or even fatal," she wrote in an Oct. 31 memo.
Her assessment is supported by other senior medical staff at Defence Department headquarters.
"Typically, any time (the army) finds something that is good, if a little is good a lot is better," Lt.-Cmdr. Ian Torrie, a physician and expert in combat casualty training, said in an interview.
"The people who are going to get this extra training, you really want your brightest person. You really don't want everybody to have it."
Since the lessons-learned document was written, the army has increased the number of soldiers qualified for casualty care, but Torrie refused to discuss numbers, citing security concerns.
The soldiers given higher level first aid use elaborate mannequins. A variant of the course given only to full-fledged medics involves the controversial but limited use of injured live animals, specifically pigs.
"What we're doing is very carefully scrutinized and goes through an animal ethics board," said Torrie. "Yes, we do use live animals. They are treated very humanely."
He said the pigs are sedated and given spinal blocks so they don't feel pain.
"We all find it very difficult to deal with live animals, but recognize the value and it actually is saving lives," said Torrie.
The Canadian Forces first adopted combat casualty training after the first friendly-fire incident in 2002, which left four soldiers dead and eight wounded when an American pilot accidentally bombed Canadian troops in a training exercise outside of Kandahar Airfield.