CoROM cast. Wilderness, Austere, Remote and Resource-limited Medicine.

College of Remote and Offshore Medicine

Hosted by Aebhric O'Kelly, a critical care paramedic and former Green Beret, CoROM Cast explores wilderness medicine, austere healthcare, tropical diseases, emergency medicine, and remote medical practice. Weekly discussions feature global experts on Prolonged Field Care, Austere Critical Care, disaster medicine, humanitarian response, military pre-hospital care, tropical medicine, expedition healthcare, medical innovation, and practical solutions for healthcare in resource-limited environments. Published by CoROM Press www.corom.edu.mt

  1. 197-Poland PFC with Eagle-Med Systems

    6d ago

    197-Poland PFC with Eagle-Med Systems

    This week, Aebhric O’Kelly is joined by Robert Jędrych, a Polish tactical medicine instructor and founder of the Eagle Med System, who appears on the CoROM Podcast to discuss the evolution of tactical medicine and prolonged field care (PFC) training in Poland and Central Europe. Drawing from more than two decades of experience as a paramedic and tactical medicine educator, Robert shares insights into the realities of preparing civilian and military medical personnel for austere and conflict-adjacent environments. The discussion explores the growing demand for prolonged casualty care education due to the ongoing war in Ukraine, the limitations of current civilian tactical medicine pathways, and the importance of realistic scenario-based training. Robert also reflects on his first attendance at the Special Operations Medical Association Scientific Assembly conference and outlines his vision for the future of tactical medicine education in Poland. Chapters • 00:00 – Introduction to Robert Jędrych and his background in tactical and austere medicine • 02:20 – Launching the first Austere Emergency Care (AEC) programme in Poland • 03:40 – Why prolonged field care training is increasingly important in Eastern Europe • 04:40 – Medical support and casualty flow from Ukraine into Poland • 05:10 – Building Eagle Med System and tactical medicine education in Poland • 05:45 – Civilian TCCC versus TECC: the confusion in tactical medicine education • 07:30 – Why TECC lacks a Combat Medic/Corpsman equivalent pathway • 11:15 – Discussion on developing an advanced TECC training framework • 14:50 – The impact of prolonged field care and AEC training on operational readiness • 16:20 – What is missing from current tactical medicine training programmes • 17:20 – The importance of realistic scenarios, stress inoculation, and live tissue/cadaver training • 20:50 – Lessons learned from prolonged field care scenarios and provider fatigue • 21:00 – Attending the Special Operations Medical Association Scientific Assembly conference for the first time • 23:05 – Robert’s five-year plan for tactical medicine and PFC development in Poland • 25:00 – Advice for new medics entering austere and tactical medicine • 27:10 – Final thoughts and future collaboration Key Discussion Points The Growth of Austere Emergency Care in Poland Robert discusses implementing the first AEC programme in Poland and the growing recognition that prolonged casualty care requires far more than procedural medicine. Topics include leadership, communication, patient monitoring, documentation, and decision-making in hostile and resource-limited environments. Civilian Tactical Medicine and the TECC Gap The episode examines the disconnect between civilian tactical medicine needs and current educational pathways. While TCCC remains widely recognised, Robert and Aebhric discuss the absence of a TECC equivalent to the Combat Medic/Corpsman pathway and the need for advanced civilian tactical medical training. Realistic Scenario Training Robert emphasises that high-fidelity scenarios, environmental stress, fatigue, noise, and realistic casualty simulation are essential for preparing providers to function under pressure. He highlights the importance of moving beyond classroom mannequin training into operationally relevant simulation. Lessons from Ukraine Poland’s proximity to the war in Ukraine has shaped the urgency of tactical medicine education. Robert explains how exposure to real-world casualty care challenges has reinforced the need for prolonged field care training among both military and civilian healthcare providers. Building the Future of Tactical Medicine Robert outlines his vision for creating a dedicated training centre, expanding international partnerships, and building a stronger community of instructors capable of teaching evidence-based medicine grounded in operational realities.

    22 min
  2. 196-MSIW and Guerrilla Medicine with Antonio from EuroMedics

    May 22

    196-MSIW and Guerrilla Medicine with Antonio from EuroMedics

    This week, Aebhric O’Kelly is joined by Antonio from European Medics to discuss his first experience attending the Special Operations Medical Association Symposium, the growing importance of Medical Support to Irregular Warfare (MSIW), and how civilian and military healthcare systems must integrate to prepare for future conflicts and disasters. Antonio reflects on lessons from occupied Poland, resistance medicine, Ukrainian battlefield realities, and the importance of resilience, logistics, telemedicine, and improvised medicine in modern austere healthcare systems. Chapters 00:00 Introduction and Antonio’s background 01:10 First experience attending SOMA 03:10 “People over products” in tactical medicine 04:30 Civilian involvement in special operations medicine 06:50 Key lessons from the MSIW track 09:45 What is Medical Support to Irregular Warfare (MSIW)? 11:10 Historical resistance medicine in Poland and the Baltics 15:00 Underground clinics and covert evacuation chains 17:30 Telemedicine in resistance healthcare 18:30 How civilian medics can prepare for MSIW 21:00 TCCC, JTS CPGs, and tactical medicine education 22:00 European Medics Tactical Clinical Operations (TCO) course 23:30 Taiwan, resilience, and whole-of-society defence 26:20 Logistics and manufacturing challenges in conflict 28:40 Relationship building and NATO interoperability 29:10 3D printing and improvised medicine 31:20 Antonio’s passion for guerrilla medicine 34:00 Future plans: anaesthesia, ICU, and flight medicine 35:10 Advice for new medics entering austere medicine 37:00 Closing remarks Episode Highlights First impressions from the SOMA Symposium Why “people over products” matters in tactical medicine Civilian-military integration in modern conflict What MSIW (Medical Support to Irregular Warfare) actually means Historical resistance medicine in Poland and the Baltics Lessons from Ukraine and occupied territories Underground clinics and covert casualty evacuation Telemedicine and distributed healthcare networks Why civilian clinicians should learn TCCC Logistics, supply chains, and local manufacturing during war 3D printing and improvised medical equipment The future of European resilience medicine Advice for new medics entering austere medicine

    33 min
  3. 195-Damage Control Procedures with Dr John Quinn

    May 15

    195-Damage Control Procedures with Dr John Quinn

    This week, Dr John Quinn joins Aebhric O’Kelly to discuss the emerging field of Damage Control Procedures (DCP) for austere, prolonged, and contested environments. Dr Quinn explores the growing operational gap between Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) and definitive surgical care, particularly in Ukraine and other high-threat environments where evacuation delays can extend for days. The discussion covers the development of DCP curricula, governance challenges, telemedicine oversight, surgical skills for non-surgeons, and the operational realities driving innovation in prolonged casualty care. The episode also examines lessons learned from Ukraine, the future of austere procedural medicine, and how modern conflict is reshaping medical doctrine across NATO and partner nations. Chapters 00:05 – Introduction to Dr John Quinn and current operational work00:39 – Volunteering in Ukraine and advancing damage control resuscitation01:20 – What are Damage Control Procedures (DCP)?02:01 – The gap between TCCC and definitive surgery03:25 – Why delayed evacuation changes medical doctrine04:29 – Surgical skills for paramedics, nurses, and combat medics05:20 – Governance and legal challenges surrounding DCP06:26 – How surgeons may react to DCP concepts07:16 – Telemedicine oversight and surgeon mentorship in austere care09:11 – Surgical expertise shaping the DCP curriculum10:08 – Overview of the DCP programme structure11:16 – Tier 1 skills: surgical airways, thoracostomy, tourniquet conversion, traumatic amputations12:43 – Tier 2 skills: laparotomy, external fixation, fasciotomy, advanced burns14:29 – Tier 3 concepts: burr holes and REBOA15:47 – Future concepts: haemofiltration and advanced austere ICU care18:22 – Why DCP sounds controversial — and why it may still be necessary19:16 – Telemedicine vs autonomous procedural decision-making22:05 – Clinical governance and parallels with paramedic evolution23:38 – Why basic life support remains foundational25:35 – Historical parallels with early paramedic medicine26:36 – Expansion of chest tube and intraosseous use in Ukraine30:11 – What happens next for the DCP pathway?31:24 – The importance of listening to Ukrainian clinicians32:21 – DCP beyond special operations medicine33:32 – Introduction to the Disaster Health Institute (DHI)35:37 – Bridging strategic and operational medicine36:17 – SOF Combat Medical Conference (CMC) discussion38:19 – Upcoming RCSEd webinar on DCP39:30 – Lessons learned from Ukrainian workshops and role-zero care41:40 – Drone warfare, attacks on medical personnel, and evacuation challenges43:18 – Why Ukrainian medics are requesting Tier 1 and Tier 2 DCP capability45:18 – Upcoming DCP workshop at Medicine in the Mediterranean46:31 – Advice for clinicians entering austere medicine50:27 – AI, education, digital twins, and the future of medical content Guest bio Dr John Quinn is an operational clinician, researcher, and educator working across prehospital care, austere medicine, disaster health, and military medicine. Originally trained as a paramedic, he later completed both medical and doctoral training and now works clinically within the United Kingdom while supporting medical projects and training initiatives in Ukraine. Dr. Quinn is involved in the development of Damage Control Procedures curricula and collaborates with international subject matter experts, surgeons, and operational clinicians to improve prolonged casualty care capability in contested environments. Disaster Health Institute is a collaborative network focused on disaster health, operational medicine, epidemiology, humanitarian response, and strategic healthcare preparedness. The organisation works with subject matter experts across Europe, North America, Central Asia, Africa, and South America to develop evidence-informed approaches to modern operational health challenges.

    49 min
  4. 194-MScACC graduate William Krupa

    May 8

    194-MScACC graduate William Krupa

    This week, Aebhric O'Kelly is joined by William Krupa, who recently graduated from the MSc Austere Critical Care programme. They discuss wilderness medicine, tactical medicine education, prolonged field care, and his experience completing the MSc in Austere Critical Care at the College of Remote and Offshore Medicine Foundation. William shares his journey from infantry soldier to paramedic educator, discusses teaching Wilderness First Responder (WFR) programmes, reflects on attending the Medicine in the Mediterranean Conference in Malta, and provides an overview of his MSc thesis on austere mechanical ventilation using portable oxygen concentrators and closed-circuit systems. This episode explores how austere medicine education can reinvigorate clinicians, improve critical thinking, and bridge the gap between theory and operational practice. Chapters 00:00 – Introduction to the episode and guest welcome 00:41 – William’s current work in paramedicine, wilderness medicine, and tactical medicine education 01:20 – Military background and transition into medicine 02:30 – Repeating EMT training after military service 03:53 – Why repeated teaching improves clinicians and educators 05:07 – The value of teaching Wilderness First Responder (WFR) courses 07:22 – Deep dives into improvised medicine during longer wilderness courses 07:55 – The history of CoROM and how WFR led to degree programmes 09:33 – William’s first trip to Malta for APUS and ICARE 10:20 – Scenario-based learning and hands-on education at CoROM 11:34 – The realism of the ICARE moulage and burn simulations 14:05 – Medicine in the Mediterranean Conference experience 14:51 – Ukraine battlefield medicine workshop and WPC certification 15:40 – Graduation and earning the MSc in Austere Critical Care 16:14 – Publishing research and future doctoral plans 17:18 – Why William chose the MSc in Austere Critical Care 19:23 – What makes CoROM different from other critical care programmes 22:16 – Mentorship from MD-PhD faculty and practical education 26:08 – William’s MSc thesis on austere mechanical ventilation 27:39 – Using oxygen concentrators and closed-circuit systems in austere care 29:28 – Research discussion: dual oxygen concentrators and FiO₂ optimisation 31:15 – Challenges during the MSc programme 33:32 – How the MSc changed William’s clinical practice 34:44 – Suggestions for future development of the MSc programme 36:47 – Teaching WFR in Utah with Black Swan and Human Path 39:01 – Achieving Fellowship of the Academy of Wilderness Medicine (FAWM) 41:08 – Why wilderness fellowships carry professional value 43:46 – Advice for new medics entering austere medicine 45:11 – Closing remarks and congratulations Key Topics • Wilderness medicine education • WMS FAWM • Tactical medicine and TC3 instruction • Prolonged Field Care (PFC) • Austere Critical Care education • Scenario-based simulation training • Improvised medicine • Mechanical ventilation in austere environments • Oxygen conservation strategies • Wilderness medicine fellowships • Medical education mentorship • International austere medicine collaboration Key Takeaways • Scenario-based education improves retention and operational performance. • Wilderness medicine often reignites clinicians’ passion for medicine. • Austere medicine requires adaptability rather than dependence on resources. • International collaboration broadens clinical understanding and perspective. • Practical mentorship from operational clinicians is critical in advanced education. • Mechanical ventilation in austere environments may be feasible with low-resource systems. • Long-form wilderness courses allow deeper exploration of improvised medicine concepts. • Continuous learning is essential for clinicians operating in remote and austere environments.

    35 min
  5. 193-Severe Malaria Patient Featuring Zach Andrews

    May 1

    193-Severe Malaria Patient Featuring Zach Andrews

    This week, Aebhric is again joined by Zach Andrews, who leads the latest episode of CoROM Conversations, which explores the recognition and management of severe malaria in resource-limited and austere environments. Drawing on field-relevant clinical reasoning, the discussion focuses on the progression from uncomplicated to life-threatening disease, with emphasis on Plasmodium falciparum as the primary driver of severe pathology. The conversation highlights the diagnostic challenges faced by remote medics, where laboratory confirmation may be delayed or unavailable, and underscores the importance of clinical pattern recognition, early intervention, and ongoing reassessment. Particular attention is given to complications such as cerebral malaria, severe anaemia, metabolic acidosis, and hypoglycaemia—all of which significantly increase mortality if not rapidly addressed. From a prolonged field care perspective, the episode integrates pragmatic strategies for stabilisation, monitoring, and evacuation decision-making. It reinforces the need for structured patient assessment using frameworks such as CABCDEFGH, along with trending vital signs over time. The discussion ultimately bridges tropical medicine with austere critical care, offering actionable insights for medics operating far from definitive care. Key Learning Points Severe malaria is a time-critical diagnosis, most commonly associated with Plasmodium falciparum, requiring immediate treatment even before confirmatory testing. Red flag features include altered mental status, respiratory distress, severe anaemia, hypoglycaemia, and shock. Hypoglycaemia is both a complication of malaria and a side effect of treatment (e.g., quinine), necessitating frequent glucose monitoring. In austere environments, clinical diagnosis often precedes laboratory confirmation, requiring high suspicion in febrile patients with travel or endemic exposure. Fluid management must be cautious, balancing the risks of hypovolaemia and pulmonary oedema. Prolonged care requires integration of nursing principles (HITMAN, SHEEP VOMIT) to prevent secondary deterioration. Early administration of parenteral antimalarials (e.g., artesunate where available) is critical to survival. Evacuation planning should be initiated early, but delays must not postpone life-saving interventions. Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction Overview of the case and relevance to austere medicine 02:30 – Pathophysiology of Severe Malaria Mechanisms of microvascular obstruction and organ dysfunction 06:00 – Clinical Presentation Recognising early vs severe disease in the field 10:30 – Assessment Frameworks Applying structured approaches (CABCDEFGH, CPRO, BEAST) 15:00 – Management Priorities Antimalarials, glucose, fluids, and airway considerations 20:30 – Complications and Monitoring Cerebral malaria, acidosis, anaemia, and respiratory failure 25:00 – Prolonged Field Care Considerations Nursing care, documentation, and trending 30:00 – Evacuation and Decision-Making When and how to move the patient 33:00 – Key Takeaways and Closing Thoughts Clinical Pearls / Take-Home Messages Treat first, confirm later: In suspected severe malaria, delays in treatment increase mortality. Check glucose early and often: Hypoglycaemia can be rapidly fatal and easily missed. Think beyond fever: Altered mental status or respiratory changes may be the first sign of severe disease. Your greatest tool is reassessment: Trends in vital signs are more valuable than single data points. Good nursing care saves lives: Positioning, hydration, hygiene, and monitoring are critical in prolonged care environments. Suggested References World Health Organization. Guidelines for the Treatment of Malaria (latest edition). Joint Trauma System Clinical Practice Guidelines: Prolonged Casualty Care. World Health Organization. Severe Malaria (Tropical Medicine reference standards). White NJ et al. Malaria. The Lancet.

    58 min

About

Hosted by Aebhric O'Kelly, a critical care paramedic and former Green Beret, CoROM Cast explores wilderness medicine, austere healthcare, tropical diseases, emergency medicine, and remote medical practice. Weekly discussions feature global experts on Prolonged Field Care, Austere Critical Care, disaster medicine, humanitarian response, military pre-hospital care, tropical medicine, expedition healthcare, medical innovation, and practical solutions for healthcare in resource-limited environments. Published by CoROM Press www.corom.edu.mt

You Might Also Like