Primary Casualty Reception Ship: the hospital within--Operation Granby
- PMID: 1460595
Primary Casualty Reception Ship: the hospital within--Operation Granby
Abstract
As the build-up of Operation Granby forces developed in the Gulf, casualty estimates indicated the need for a 100-bed hospital facility to care for the possible maritime casualties. RFA Argus, the Air Training Ship, was identified as the potential Primary Casualty Reception Ship (PCRS) and at the end of September 1990 plans were drawn up to convert the forward hangar into a two-storey 100-bed hospital in collective protection (COLPRO). In the three weeks prior to deployment, the hospital was designed, built, equipped and staffed. Argus arrived in the Gulf in mid-November as the PCRS with, all in COLPRO, a 10-bed intensive care unit (ICU), a 14-bed high dependency unit (HDU), a 76-bed low dependency unit (LDU) plus four operating tables in two theatres with full support services. The hospital was staffed by a medical team of 136 personnel and supported by the Air department with four casualty evacuation helicopters, an RN Party and the staff of the RFA. One hundred and five patients were treated of which 78 were returned to duty. Argu as PCRS spent longer in the northern Persian Gulf than any other ship, UK or US.
Similar articles
-
Naval Party 1036: its role in the Gulf Conflict.J R Nav Med Serv. 1992 Summer;78(2):65-71. J R Nav Med Serv. 1992. PMID: 1460596
-
Maritime pre-hospital emergency care primary retrieval team--operational considerations.J R Nav Med Serv. 2012;98(1):16-8. J R Nav Med Serv. 2012. PMID: 22558736
-
Primary casualty receiving facility [Argus on Operational Sea Training].J R Nav Med Serv. 2005;91(3):158-60. J R Nav Med Serv. 2005. PMID: 16383278 No abstract available.
-
Challenges of Forward Naval Surgical Support for Maritime Forces.Mil Med. 2015 Aug;180(8):888-91. doi: 10.7205/MILMED-D-14-00532. Mil Med. 2015. PMID: 26226532 Review.
-
What do we need for airway management of adult casualties on the Primary Casualty Receiving Facility? A review of airway management on Role 3 Afloat.J R Nav Med Serv. 2015;101(2):155-9. J R Nav Med Serv. 2015. PMID: 26867417 Review.
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Medical
Research Materials