Reddit Reddit reviews Ranger Medic Handbook, 4th Edition

We found 3 Reddit comments about Ranger Medic Handbook, 4th Edition. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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Ranger Medic Handbook, 4th Edition
UPDATED 4th Edition adds more than 100 pages of new content:Contains sections for Tactical Combat Casualty Care, trauma protocols/procedures, common sick-call subjects, pharmacology, duties/responsibilities, packing lists & more...Pocket-sized format. Durable 12 mil UltraFilm coverTear-resistant & waterproof pages of 6 mil paperStay-open, flexible coilspiral binding
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3 Reddit comments about Ranger Medic Handbook, 4th Edition:

u/vectaur · 28 pointsr/IAmA

Is this something available to civilians? I poked around the internet a bit and this seems like it might be it, but not sure.

u/Potato_Muncher · 3 pointsr/CombatFootage

Corpsman training is 18 weeks long at first bat.

Army 68W (Combat Medic) training is 16 weeks long to start off with.

Both eventually move on to different schools/training courses/etc before or after they reach their units. We Army Medics are trained on a wide variety of medical procedures starting from trauma to medication dispensary. We are also certified with EMT-Basic's after the first eight weeks of training, even though most of the interventions we do are beyond that scope of practice. I won't even go into the insane amount of ASI's that you can acquire afterwards.

Army Medics can move between hospitals and infantry units. I have seen plenty of medics go from hospitals to combat arms and vise versa without a hiccup. Inter-service experience is pretty common among us, especially for Civil Affairs, Special Operations and other qualified Medics.

Wouldn't say there's a whole lot of difference between the two jobs. Corpsman are initially trained on a broader spectrum of environments than us Combat Medics are. Our follow-on training narrows the gap, though. Just clearing up a few of the inaccuracies.

EDIT: Just a couple of pictures from documents and manuals that I was required to carry during my time as a Combat Medic.

Soldier Skills Task List: Identified the broad, generalized skills we were required to maintain during our time assigned to my old battalion.

3ID Marne Standard booklet: Identified all post-specific rules and regulations to follow. My battalion had an insert they provided that detailed all required reading and training pertaining to the medical platoon. Not Army wide, just division specific material.

And of course, the Ranger Medic Handbook. We followed that thing to the letter. There is not much in that book I have no trained on or have done in an actual firefight. I still have mine and keep it in my aid-bag at all times.

u/Allenzilla · 1 pointr/Militaryfaq

EMT phase is just condensed into eight weeks and is at a fast pace. If you are quick learner it shouldn't be too much of an issue. Put in the extra time and study your book at night. It is all information that is geared toward the national standard so just do NREMT review and maybe buy an EMT text book and flip through and get a basic understanding. Below I included some resources for some really good books to own. I would honestly be impressed if I was an instructor at whiskey land and saw a student with a ranger medic handbook and was familiar with it.

https://www.amazon.com/68W-Advanced-Field-Craft-2009-02-13/dp/B01JXSAGKS/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1492880425&sr=8-2&keywords=68w+combat+medic
Is a good resource, but is a bit large to be carried on you
https://www.amazon.com/Ranger-Medic-Handbook-Harold-Montgomery/dp/1601709293/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1492880456&sr=8-2&keywords=ranger+medic+handbook
Ranger medic handbook is the gold standard for treatments, drugs, everything you could possibly want and is designed to fit in your cargo pocket. Every medic at my unit is "highly recommended to have one" aka you better fucking have it.
As for when you are out of EMT phase and learning what the army does for a combat casualty they follow the TCCC algorithm
https://www.jsomonline.org/TCCC.html