Combat support hospital
From Free net encyclopedia
A Combat Support Hospital (CSH) is a United States military mobile hospital delivered to the Corps Support Area in standard military-owned Demountable Containers(MILVAN) cargo containers and assembled by the staff into a tent hospital to treat wounded soldiers.
The size of the hospital is almost infinitely expandable by chaining tents together, but it will typically deploy with between 16 and 256 operational hospital beds. The most popular configuration is 84 patient beds. The CSH will also treat civilians or opposition soldiers wounded by U.S. military and those in life-or-death situations.
The great operational advantage of the DEPMEDS facility pictured below is the use of single or double expanding milvans to create hard sided, air conditioned, sterile operating rooms and intensive care facilities, which can produce surgical outcomes similar to that seen in fixed facility hospitals, and do so in an austere environment.
This identical equipment is used by the American Navy for Fleet Hospitals. It has also been exported to many other countries.
The CSH is climate controlled (for patients but not staff), and has pharmacy, laboratory, X-Ray (often including a CT Scanner) and dental capabilites. It provides its own power from 100kw generators.
Because it is large and relatively difficult to move, Combat Support Hospitals are not the front line of Military Medical Care. Battalion Aid Stations, Forward Support Medical Battalions and Forward Surgical Teams are usually the first point of contact medical care for wounded soldiers. The CSH receives most patients via Helicopter Air Ambulance, and stabilizes these patients for further treatment at fixed facility hospitals. Ideally, the CSH is located as the bridge between incoming helicopter ambulances and outgoing Air Force aircraft.
The CSH is capable of providing definitive care for many cases. Current medical doctrine does not encourage wounded soldiers, if they are not expected to quickly return to operational status, in the combat zone. This is a pragmatic decision as the resources are usually available to bring them home quickly. Military aircraft constantly fly in to a theater of operations loaded with equipment and supplies, but often lack a back cargo. Given that adequate "airlift" is usually present, it is easy to evacuate wounded promptly. For this reason the CSH bed capacity is not as heavily used as in past conflicts.
The CSH is the successor to the "Mobile Army Surgical Hospital" or MASH. It is differentiated by the capability of its equipment and size, with the CSH being by far the larger organization, and Commanded by a full Colonel (O-6), rather than a Lietenant Colonel (O-5).
A "full up" CSH has 624 people to staff 256 beds. The modular nature of the organization allows for partial deployments, and the full unit is not often so deployed.