Elsevier

The Lancet

Volume 376, Issue 9736, 17–23 July 2010, Pages 149-151
The Lancet

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UK's NHS trauma systems: lessons from military experience

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(10)60622-8Get rights and content

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There are more references available in the full text version of this article.

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    The advances in military nursing knowledge provide potential opportunities for translation into most civilian fields of nursing, particularly trauma, critical care, peri-operative and mental health nursing. The translation of combat casualty research, such as trauma governance and treatment of massive haemorrhage are evidence of the utility of military research to the civilian setting (Hettiaratchy et al., 2010; Orman et al., 2012). Capturing the lessons learned and ensuring that military nursing builds upon a firm evidence base is essential and will facilitate ongoing advancement of care paradigms as well as translation of practices into the civilian setting.

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    Transition from research to routine clinical practice can be extremely slow and so it is unlikely that these changes in practice would have been implemented so quickly and so universally had the organisation of trauma care not changed. This may have been because the MTCs all adopted similar treatment protocols, largely based upon the translation into civilian practice of the military experience in Iraq and Afghanistan [28]. There are still a large number of unanswered questions.

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