Direct pressure, elevation, clotting agents, and tourniquets are taught for bleeding control. For minor or venous bleeding, an Emergency Bandage is used to treat an injured officer not involved in an ongoing tactical operation. Major bleeding is controlled with the use of clotting agents and a pressure bandage. Tourniquet application is taught for bleeding not controlled by other means, or when the situation demands bleeding control be accomplished immediately.
Transferring the Patient
The signs and symptoms of shock are taught with emphasis on mental status changes. The importance of recognizing shock, other than through blood loss, is stressed as an early warning sign for prevention of future complications. Treatment includes keeping the wounded officer warm and calm.
A wounded officer can come to rest in a variety of body positions, but the only way to completely survey wounded officers is to place them on their backs. A rapid simple method is taught to move officers onto their backs while maintaining cervical spine precautions.
Finally, officers are taught how to transfer care of the injured to EMS. Officers are told to report to EMS personnel the nature of the injury, mental status, mental status changes, airway control, rates of breathing and circulation, what injuries they saw, what injuries they fixed, how they did it, and any unusual findings.