Look up "tactical combat casualty care", it has a good list of why the current protocols are in place..
I get to see the draft versions, it is not bad.
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Look up "tactical combat casualty care", it has a good list of why the current protocols are in place..
But it's not, all it does is get you a badge which is replaced by the CMB the second you treat a casualty in combat
Subsequent to 11 September 2001 – Personnel outlined in (1) and (3) above, assigned or attached to or under operational control of any ground Combat Arms units (not to include members assigned or attached to Aviation units) of brigade or smaller size, who satisfactorily performed medical duties while the unit is engaged in actual ground combat provided they are personally present and under fire. Retroactive awards are not authorized.
Not really. The body fat %s of recruits out of basic are a good example of that, this is from the years of 2005 and 2008, and badges don't really have anything to do with recruitment standards.
Also considering that 75% of Americans are not eligeable for military service I thin the "lower standards" thing is a bit over dramatized
Even non-trauma docs are eligible for it simply by virtue of being in a hospital in a combat zone that is ever under some sort of direct or indirect fire. If you're willing to play around with anecdotal evidence, I know a psychiatrist who has the CMB for more or less sleeping through a mortar round landing on the other side of the compound. It's arguably the easier of the two to earn. As one of my 68W friends put it, it's the "thanks for showing up" badge for medical personnel. I don't know many people who look on it as prestigious or anything. Then again, most of the folks I know care less about the decorations and more about doing their job. Your mileage apparently varies....
See: http://www.army.mil/symbols/CombatBadges/medical.html Caveat #4 is the primarily pertinent one here:
You've seriously never seen this? Wow...I would tend to disagree with you on that. You should have seen some of the people I was at Basic and AIT with. They were some major Dbags all around. And where are you getting the 75% of Americans are not eligible for military service? I dont think the "lower standards" is over dramatized.
If you think it doesn't mean anything, go find someone who survived a combat injury and ask him what he thinks of his medic's CMB.
You do realize that, it says 17-24 right? There for that is not 75% of Americans. You should check your facts before throwing out numbers.
Whose to say it was the medic that saved his life? Could have been another guy with CLS training.
Ok so then I take it you don't know that as far as line/field medics go most purposely fail out so they get to go home early? Especially in times of war when the CMB is what matters, not the EFMB? Or that the only medics that really take it seriously at all are hospital medics who've been spending the last X amount of years working more as a janitor/litter carrier than doing actual medical skills?
Earned mine in 92, it had about a 15% pass rate, in fact, I was the only medic in my battalion to earn it. As for the CMB, that can be earned by sitting in a clinic in Kuwait or breaching walls in the Hindu Kush, it isn't a "test", you get it for showing up, weather involved in combat or not. Coming from a line unit, I kind of felt that was wrong, but that was just my opinion at the time.
Clearly times have changed, earning your EFMB was the way to promote, get selected for schools, etc... In fact, it was the non-combat types who pissed and moaned, failed PT, failed land nav, failed 12 mile road march and had no clue. It was the same at air assault school, the REMFs cried and whined about everything, the field guys just soldiered on.
On my way to EFMB at the end of this month. I will let you know if they are using the TC3 guildlines when I get back.
Also af: I dint know why your bragging about a friend getting a CMB pencil whipped: sleeping isn't performing medical duties.
I wasn't bragging, just making the point that it's a more or less pointless exercise to argue that this badge means more than that one or that it's more coveted.
Your logic fails...