title: Combat Medic
slug: combat-medic
aliases:
  - Medic
  - Tactical Medic
  - Healthcare Specialist
category: Military
tags:
  - trauma
  - tccc
  - battlefield
  - hemorrhage-control
  - military-medicine
difficulty: advanced
summary: >-
  Keeps wounded soldiers alive at the point of injury under fire, treating the
  few causes of preventable death in the right order while balancing the
  casualty, the mission, and the medic's own survival.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: paramedic
    type: related
    note: shares trauma-first hemorrhage-control medicine, here under fire
  - slug: emergency-physician
    type: collaboration
    note: receiving clinician whose trauma resuscitation the field care feeds
  - slug: infantry-officer
    type: collaboration
    note: commander whose mission and tactics frame every medical choice
  - slug: logistics-officer
    type: collaboration
    note: keeps the medical supply and evacuation chain moving
  - slug: surgeon
    type: adjacent
    note: the definitive trauma care the medic buys time to reach
specializations:
  - Flight Medic
  - Special Operations Combat Medic
  - Tactical Paramedic
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) Guidelines
    kind: standard
  - title: Emergency War Surgery (U.S. DoD)
    kind: book
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      A combat medic exists to keep wounded soldiers alive on the battlefield —
      to

      deliver life-saving care at the point of injury, under fire, with what
      fits in a

      ruck, until the casualty can reach a surgeon. The work is trauma medicine

      stripped to its lethal essentials and practiced in the worst possible
      conditions:

      darkness, noise, an active enemy, limited supplies, and a casualty who may
      be the

      medic's friend. The defining truth is that most battlefield deaths happen
      in the

      first minutes from a handful of preventable causes — catastrophic
      bleeding, a

      blocked airway, a tension pneumothorax — and that a soldier with basic
      equipment

      and ruthless prioritization can prevent the majority of them. The medic
      exists

      because that window is too short for anyone but the person already on the
      ground.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Keep the wounded alive and get them to surgical care — treating the few
      injuries

      that kill in minutes, in the right order, while managing the tactical
      reality that

      the medic's own survival and the mission both still matter.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The visible work is "patching up the wounded"; the actual work is trauma
      triage

      and intervention fused with combat soldiering. A combat medic provides
      Tactical

      Combat Casualty Care across its phases — returning fire and stopping
      massive

      bleeding under threat, then managing airway, breathing, and circulation
      once

      relatively safe; applies tourniquets and hemostatic dressings;
      decompresses

      tension pneumothoraces; manages airways with adjuncts and surgical
      airways;

      establishes IV/IO access and gives fluids, blood, and analgesia; performs
      triage

      across multiple casualties; documents and hands off to evacuation; and,
      between

      firefights, manages the unit's routine health, hygiene, and prevention.
      Underneath

      it is a constant dual identity — soldier first in the sense that a dead
      medic

      saves no one, clinician in the windows that combat allows.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **The right care, at the right time, sequenced to the tactical
      situation.** Under
        fire, the best medicine may be suppressing the enemy and moving to cover; medicine
        comes when it can be done without creating more casualties.
      - **Massive hemorrhage kills first and fastest — stop it now.** The
      tourniquet goes
        on high and tight before anything else; bleeding control under threat beats every
        other intervention.
      - **A dead medic treats no one.** Self-preservation isn't selfishness;
      it's the
        precondition for saving everyone else.
      - **Treat the preventable causes of death, in order.** Massive hemorrhage,
      airway,
        respiration, circulation, hypothermia/head — the MARCH sequence imposes
        discipline when chaos invites panic.
      - **Good enough now beats perfect later.** Field care buys time to the
      surgeon; it
        is not definitive care and shouldn't try to be.
      - **The mission and the casualty both have a claim.** Sometimes care must
      wait for
        fire superiority; the medic holds both realities without freezing.
      - **Keep them warm, keep them moving toward surgery.** Cold, acidotic,
      bleeding
        patients die; minimize scene time once threats allow.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **MARCH algorithm.** Massive hemorrhage, Airway, Respiration,
      Circulation,
        Hypothermia/Head — a battlefield reordering of ABCDE that puts bleeding first
        because that's what kills first in combat. The sequence is a checklist that
        survives adrenaline.
      - **The three phases of TCCC.** Care Under Fire (the enemy is the
      priority; stop
        massive bleeding, move to cover), Tactical Field Care (relative safety; full
        assessment and treatment), Tactical Evacuation Care (en route to higher care).
        The phase dictates what medicine is even possible.
      - **Preventable death triad.** Most survivable battlefield deaths come
      from
        extremity hemorrhage, tension pneumothorax, and airway obstruction — three things
        a medic can fix with simple tools. Hunt them first.
      - **The lethal triad of trauma.** Hypothermia, acidosis, and coagulopathy
      reinforce
        each other; keeping the casualty warm and moving fast to surgery interrupts the
        spiral.
      - **Triage under scarcity.** With many casualties and finite hands and
      supplies,
        treat for the greatest good — which may mean passing the expectant to save the
        salvageable, the hardest math in medicine.
      - **Soldier-first, medic-second framing.** The medic is a combatant who
      happens to
        carry an aid bag; tactical awareness keeps both the medic and the casualty alive.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - The first minutes decide most battlefield deaths; you are the only
      clinician in
        them.
      - The tactical situation outranks the medicine until it's safe to treat.

      - You carry only what fits on your back; improvise the rest.

      - Bleeding is the enemy that beats every other injury to the kill.

      - Your survival is a resource the whole unit depends on.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - Are we still under effective fire — is it even safe to treat yet?

      - Is there massive bleeding, and is my tourniquet high, tight, and
      working?

      - Which casualty do I treat first, and who do I have to walk past?

      - What's the fastest way to definitive surgical care, and is it called?

      - Is this casualty's airway and chest going to kill them before the
      bleeding I
        already stopped?
      - Am I keeping them warm, and am I moving them toward the surgeon?

      - What can I do with what's in my bag, right now, that changes survival?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Phase-driven care (TCCC).** Match the intervention to the phase: under
      fire,
        win the firefight and apply a tourniquet only if feasible; in tactical field
        care, run MARCH fully; in evacuation, reassess and prepare handoff. The phase,
        not the injury alone, sets what's possible.
      - **MARCH prioritization.** Treat in the fixed order — the worst killer
      first —
        resisting the pull to fix the dramatic-looking wound over the silent
        exsanguination.
      - **Mass-casualty triage.** Sort by salvageability and resource cost:
      immediate,
        delayed, minimal, expectant. Under scarcity, deliberately allocate effort to
        those most likely to survive with it, not those most badly hurt.
      - **Treat-and-evacuate vs. treat-in-place.** Stabilize the immediate
      killers, then
        prioritize speed to surgery; field care is a bridge, and lingering to do
        surgeon's work on the ground costs lives.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Care under fire.** Return fire or direct it; move the casualty and
      yourself to
         cover; if feasible, apply a tourniquet to massive extremity bleeding — that's
         the only medicine that belongs here.
      2. **Tactical field care.** In relative safety, run MARCH: confirm
      hemorrhage
         control, secure the airway, treat the chest, manage circulation, prevent
         hypothermia, assess head injury.
      3. **Triage.** With multiple casualties, sort fast and allocate by
      salvageability.

      4. **Intervene with what you carry.** Tourniquets, hemostatics, chest
      seals and
         decompression, airway adjuncts, IO access, TXA, analgesia, blood if available.
      5. **Document and request evacuation.** Mark interventions and times; call
      the
         nine-line MEDEVAC; prepare the casualty for movement.
      6. **Tactical evacuation care.** Reassess continuously en route, manage
         deterioration, keep warm, hand off cleanly to the next level of care.
      7. **Between actions.** Manage the unit's preventive health — hygiene,
      hydration,
         feet, heat/cold — because illness can disable a unit faster than the enemy.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Mission vs. medicine.** Stopping to treat under fire can get more
      soldiers
        killed; the medic must weigh fire superiority against the bleeding casualty.
      - **One casualty vs. many.** Pouring everything into one severe casualty
      can cost
        three savable ones; triage forces the cruel arithmetic.
      - **Treat-in-place vs. evacuate.** Every minute on the ground delays
      surgery but
        some interventions can't wait for movement.
      - **Self vs. casualty.** Exposing yourself to reach a wounded soldier may
      create a
        second casualty and lose the only medic.
      - **Analgesia vs. function.** Enough pain control to be humane, without
      sedating a
        soldier who may still need to move or fight, or dropping a fragile blood
        pressure.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - Massive bleeding first — everything else can wait a minute; blood loss
      can't.

      - High and tight; if the tourniquet isn't stopping the bleed, put a second
      one
        above it.
      - Win the firefight before you do medicine — suppression is treatment
      under fire.

      - A casualty who deteriorates after you "fixed" the bleeding has a chest
      or an
        airway problem — reassess.
      - Keep them warm even in the desert; cold kills the bleeding trauma
      patient.

      - Mark the time on every tourniquet; the surgeon needs to know.

      - The expectant casualty is the hardest call and sometimes the right one.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Treating under fire when you should be fighting** — becoming the
      second
        casualty and losing the medic.
      - **Fixing the obvious wound** while a silent exsanguination or tension
      pneumothorax
        kills.
      - **Tourniquet failure** — applied too low, too loose, or never
      converted/checked,
        so the limb keeps bleeding.
      - **Over-treating one casualty** and abandoning the triage math that saves
      more.

      - **Lingering on scene** doing definitive care the surgeon should do,
      delaying
        evacuation.
      - **Neglecting hypothermia** in a bleeding patient and feeding the lethal
      triad.

      - **Freezing on the triage decision** when someone is unsalvageable.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Medicine before tactics** under effective fire.

      - **Sequence-jumping** — chasing the dramatic injury instead of running
      MARCH.

      - **The heroic single rescue** that costs the unit its medic.

      - **Gold-standard fixation** — trying to do trauma-bay medicine from a
      ruck.

      - **Triage paralysis** — unable to walk past the expectant to save the
      savable.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **TCCC** — Tactical Combat Casualty Care; the doctrine governing
      battlefield
        trauma care across its phases.
      - **MARCH** — Massive hemorrhage, Airway, Respiration, Circulation,
        Hypothermia/Head — the combat trauma priority sequence.
      - **Tourniquet** — a device that occludes arterial flow to stop massive
      limb
        bleeding; the first-line tool for extremity hemorrhage.
      - **Tension pneumothorax** — air trapped in the chest collapsing a lung
      and
        obstructing the heart; relieved by needle or finger decompression.
      - **Hemostatic dressing** — gauze impregnated with a clotting agent for
      wounds a
        tourniquet can't reach.
      - **MEDEVAC / nine-line** — medical evacuation and the standardized
      request format
        for it.
      - **Expectant** — a triage category for casualties unlikely to survive
      given
        available resources.
      - **Care Under Fire** — the TCCC phase where the threat, not the wound,
      dictates
        action.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **Tourniquets and hemostatic dressings** — the primary life-savers for
      the
        primary killer.
      - **Chest seals and decompression needles** — for penetrating chest wounds
      and
        tension pneumothorax.
      - **Airway adjuncts and surgical airway kit** — to keep the unconscious or
        facially-injured breathing.
      - **IO access, fluids, blood products, and TXA** — to fight shock and
        coagulopathy.
      - **Combat analgesia** (e.g., ketamine, oral transmucosal opioids) —
      humane, given
        with the tactical situation in mind.
      - **The aid bag and the soldier's own kit** — everything carried;
      improvisation
        fills the rest.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      A combat medic is embedded in a fighting unit, not a clinic, and the first

      collaboration is tactical: the squad provides security and fire
      superiority so the

      medic can work, and every soldier is trained in self- and buddy-aid to
      extend the

      medic's reach. Upward, the medic feeds the evacuation chain — calling
      MEDEVAC,

      handing off to flight medics, forward surgical teams, and field hospitals
      — and

      the cleanliness of that handoff (what was done, when, what's still
      bleeding)

      determines whether the surgeon starts ahead or behind. Inward, the medic
      advises

      the commander on the health of the unit and the medical feasibility of the
      plan.

      The friction lives at the mission-versus-medicine boundary and at the
      limits of a

      single medic's hands when casualties exceed capacity.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      A combat medic carries the same duty of care as any clinician but
      exercises it

      inside the law of armed conflict and the brutal arithmetic of scarcity.
      Duties:

      treat casualties by medical need where the tactical situation allows,
      including —

      under the rules and when feasible — wounded enemy combatants and
      prisoners; make

      triage decisions honestly for the greatest good rather than by friendship
      or rank;

      relieve suffering even when survival is hopeless; and uphold the protected
      status

      of medical care while bearing arms for self- and patient-defense. The
      hardest gray

      zones are uniquely military: walking past the expectant to save the
      savable,

      weighing the mission against a single life, treating an enemy with the
      same hands

      that just fought him, and carrying the moral weight of the calls
      afterward. These

      are resolved by doctrine, by the laws of war, and by a conscience trained
      to make

      the least-bad choice and live with it.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **A soldier hit in the leg, arterial bleeding, still under effective
      fire.** The

      instinct is to rush in and treat. The trained medic doesn't — under fire,
      the

      priority is winning the firefight, because a medic shot reaching the
      casualty

      helps no one and the casualty can apply or receive a tourniquet from
      cover. The

      medic directs suppressing fire, the casualty (or a buddy) gets a
      tourniquet high

      and tight, and only once there's relative safety does the medic move to
      full care.

      Sequencing medicine behind tactics — treating the bleed with a tourniquet
      but

      holding the rest until Tactical Field Care — is exactly what TCCC was
      written in

      blood to teach.


      **Three casualties at once after an IED, one medic.** The dramatic one is
      screaming

      with a mangled arm; another is silent and barely breathing; the third has
      no

      pulse and a head wound incompatible with life. The medic resists the
      screamer's

      pull. Triage math: the silent, hypoxic casualty is the most savable with
      immediate

      action; the screamer's bleeding is controllable but not instantly fatal;
      the third

      is expectant. The medic treats the quiet one's airway and chest first,
      applies a

      tourniquet to the screamer, and makes the agonizing decision to pass the

      unsalvageable one. Allocating finite hands by salvageability, not by who
      is

      loudest, is the cruelest and most important skill.


      **A casualty who was bleeding, tourniquet applied, now deteriorating.**
      The

      hemorrhage is controlled, yet the soldier is getting worse — falling
      oxygen,

      rising distress. A novice second-guesses the tourniquet. The expert runs
      MARCH and

      recognizes the next killer: a tension pneumothorax from a chest wound,
      building

      pressure and obstructing the heart. They decompress the chest with a
      needle, and

      the casualty improves. Reassessing in sequence, and knowing that
      deterioration

      after hemorrhage control points to airway or chest, is the discipline that
      catches

      the second lethal injury behind the first.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      A combat medic practices the same trauma-first, hemorrhage-control
      medicine as the

      paramedic, but under fire, with less equipment, and as a soldier first.
      The

      emergency physician is the receiving clinician whose trauma resuscitation
      the medic's

      field care feeds into. The infantry officer is the commander whose mission
      and

      tactical decisions frame every medical choice the medic can make. The
      logistics

      officer keeps the medical supply and evacuation chain that the medic
      depends on

      moving. Where the civilian paramedic owns the gap before the hospital on
      an

      ordinary street, the combat medic owns that same gap when the street is a
      kill

      zone.
  - heading: References
    markdown: |-
      - *Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) Guidelines* — Committee on TCCC
      - *Emergency War Surgery* — U.S. Department of Defense
      - *PHTLS Military Edition* — NAEMT
      - *Ranger Medic Handbook*
