mycrofft
Still crazy but elsewhere
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- 48
In response to changes in Soviet military doctrine starting in the mid Seventies which advanced the practice and preparation for the use of first-strike chemical and bioweapons, we were trained to use chem warfare protective measures, medical facilities were designed to (in our dreams) withstand a combination of the gentle rain of chemical aerosols and the steel rain of guided high-explosive artillery, high velocity firearms, and maybe a good old nuclear follwoup. (try to look up "SKIPSAM", "SCPSM", "TEMPER tent mobile hospitals", etc. Good luck).
ADDENDUM:http://library.enlisted.info/field-manuals/series-2/FM8_10_7/APPD.PDF
We were indoctrinated to press onwards no matter what, but a few realities were indisputable despite the rhetoric:
1. Many if not most of our comrades (friends, strangers alike) would eventually die or be disabled eventually after being subjected to an attack, staying in place and pursuing the mission or defending ourselves.. (We still felt invulnerable).
2. There is no way to properly treat a patient in a MOPP 4 situation (full protective gear), and hardly any way to expediently decon them short of amputation; the chemicals in one wound could kill an entire closed shelter's worth of people.
3. Despite optimistic training, 2PAM chloride and atropine etc may keep you operating, but the effects of most war agents are not truly reversible. Burned is burned, nerve damage is nerve damage.
How has this affected the heads of so many of us medically trained "Baby Boomers"?
:mellow:
ADDENDUM:http://library.enlisted.info/field-manuals/series-2/FM8_10_7/APPD.PDF
We were indoctrinated to press onwards no matter what, but a few realities were indisputable despite the rhetoric:
1. Many if not most of our comrades (friends, strangers alike) would eventually die or be disabled eventually after being subjected to an attack, staying in place and pursuing the mission or defending ourselves.. (We still felt invulnerable).
2. There is no way to properly treat a patient in a MOPP 4 situation (full protective gear), and hardly any way to expediently decon them short of amputation; the chemicals in one wound could kill an entire closed shelter's worth of people.
3. Despite optimistic training, 2PAM chloride and atropine etc may keep you operating, but the effects of most war agents are not truly reversible. Burned is burned, nerve damage is nerve damage.
How has this affected the heads of so many of us medically trained "Baby Boomers"?
:mellow:
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