Soldier applies tourniquet to leg of fellow Soldier

BCT3 Training 2 - 10th CAB cr wb.jpgAbove: Pvt. Joseph Pinto, with 10th Combat Aviation Brigade, 10th Mountain Division (LI), applies a tourniquet to fellow 10th CAB Soldier, Cpl. Elizabeth Santana, during Brigade Combat Team Trauma Training (BCT3) on April 22, 2024, on Fort Drum, New York. Left: Soldiers with the 10th CAB practice lifesaving skills on a training dummy April 24. BCT3 is meant to prepare medics with hands-on training and knowledge of how to treat a casualty in a combat environment. (U.S. Army photos by Pfc. Alyssa Norton)

Medics at Fort Drum train to remain
on forefront of combat casualty care

Pfc. Alyssa Norton

27th Public Affairs Detachment

FORT DRUM, N.Y. (April 30, 2024) – Combat medics with the 10th Combat Aviation Brigade honed their lifesaving skills during Brigade Combat Team Tactical Trauma (BCT3) training April 22-26 at Fort Drum.

BCT3 properly teaches, in a controlled environment, how to manage trauma successfully while being put into stressful situations. It also works on medical skills Soldiers don’t always get to use.

To begin BCT3, Soldiers will take refresher courses on basic medical knowledge and “what-if” scenarios that they may encounter in their careers.

Combat medics are the first line of care when it comes to Soldiers’ health, so BCT3 covers not only refresher courses, but also teaches them the newest studies that the Army has developed so they are constantly on the forefront of casualty care.

“BCT3 is meant to reassure and reinforce their trauma training knowledge, as well as their abilities to handle trauma and stressful conditions,” said Sgt. 1st Class Travis Snyder, an instructor of BCT3 with C Company, 187th Medical Battalion, 32nd Medical Brigade, Medical Center of Excellence.

The training then progresses to Soldiers applying tourniquets and nasopharyngeal airway breathing devices and practicing circulation management skills.

“By doing this training, we expose them to a lot of situations, worst-case scenario situations,” said Staff Sgt. Ryan Zornimer, a BCT3 instructor with C Company, 187th Medical Battalion. “This will allow them to not only gain their experience, but they’ll have that confidence in conjunction with that competence to really perform their duties.”

All of the small events lead to the final day of training where the Soldiers will participate in trauma lanes. The trauma lanes are a simulated field lane where the medics will have to apply all their training in one event.

“There (have) been some tasks that I thought I was already optimized in, and then I realized that there’s still room for efficiency,” said Sgt. Joshua Cailer, a Brigade Combat Team Tactical Trauma training student from 2nd Battalion, 10th Aviation Regiment, 10th Combat Aviation Brigade. “And I genuinely feel confident of applying it to a real-world setting.”