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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 May 2011
In the present Swedish military medical organisation all medical personnel, including surgeons, have to be recruited from civilian hospitals. Even if there are many civilian surgeons well qualified to perform trauma surgery, the injury patterns seen in e.g. Afghanistan are quite different compared to what is generally seen in trauma patients arriving to the ED at a civilian hospital. In order to upgrade the major trauma skills of the civilian surgeons recruited to and trained for participating in international missions, the (extended) military version of the Definitive Surgical Trauma Care (DSTC) Course has been implemented. DSTC is given with the intention not to duplicate ATLS, nor to provide an in depth course in surgery, but rather to teach those techniques particularly applicable to the patient who requires surgery and intensive care for major trauma, in a setting where such care is not commonly practised or even necessarily available. The course, made up by a mix of lectures, case discussions and skill stations has been given at the Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine in Gothenburg since 2007. It has gradually evolved to incorporate also anaesthesiologists and nursing staff into an integrated team. The faculty during these courses has been made up by a mix of international and Swedish instructors. Course candidates have primarily been military health staff, but vacant slots have been offered clinicians working in civilian hospitals in the western part of Sweden. During the last course in September 2010 17/20 (85%) of the physicians and 13/17 (76%) of the nurses rated the course as very beneficial or indispensible. The Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine will continue to run the military version of the DSTC course. Due to a certain over-capacity, course participation can be offered the civilian health care system.