The 274th Forward Surgical Team (Airborne) is tasked with providing Level II combat health support to coalition forces, contractors, local nationals, and enemy combatants when deployed. At the same time, it maintains the ability to split for smaller force level operations to provide front-line medical and surgical support. When the surgical team is not deployed, or has not been assigned a patient care role, it is tasked with supporting the
XVIII Airborne Corps Global Response Force, and undertaking a range of tasks as part of the
Fort Bragg garrison. The forward surgical team is organized into four functional areas: • Headquarters – Communications and administrative functions. • ATLS (
Advanced Trauma Life Support) – Triages and prepares multiple casualties for surgery or transport and has a total of four beds. • OR (
Operating room) – Sets up and begins surgery within one hour, can be at full functioning capacity within two hours of establishing an area of operations. The OR has two separate OR tables that can be used at the same time allowing treatment for a greater number of casualties in a given time. The focus is for
damage control surgery. • Recovery / ICU (
intensive care unit) – four beds for post-surgical care; two beds reserved for patients awaiting evacuation. The 274th Forward Surgical Team (Airborne) consists of the following personnel: :*1
commander :*1
executive officer :*1
orthopaedic surgeon :*3
general surgeons :*2
certified registered nurse anesthetists :*1 emergency room registered nurse :*1 critical care registered nurse :*1 operating room registered nurse :*3
surgical techs :*3 licensed practical nurses :*4 medics After a soldier is wounded on the battlefield, the first care he or she receives is the care they give themselves or that which they receive from a fellow soldier. This usually consists of splints, bandages, and other efforts to control bleeding. Here, the
combat medic of the unit on the ground focus on the injured soldier's airway, breathing, and circulation. The medic then calls for a medical evacuation (
MEDEVAC) to a higher level of care. Often,
UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters will be dispatched to pick up the wounded soldiers on the battlefield and bring them back for Level II care. Level II is where the most forward surgical capacity is located. Here, the surgeons evaluate all the wounded and prioritize for surgery. Patients that require operative intervention are taken to the operating room for
damage control surgery, which is focused on abbreviated surgical times, control of hemorrhage with ligation or shunting, and control of contamination without definitive repairs. Examples of this would include patients who sustained a gunshot or blast injury through the abdomen that involved perforation of the bowel. The injured bowel segment would be resected, but not reconnected. For orthopaedic injuries, preliminary fixation is achieved with
external fixation through minimally invasive incisions rather than definitive
internal fixation (plate-and-screw, or
intramedullary fixation). The goal of these surgical interventions is to resuscitate and stabilize, not repair. Those patients that require it, are then evacuated to Level III care at a
Combat Support Hospital where there are more advanced interventions available such as CT scanners, MRIs, longer-stay intensive care units, etc. Wounds are re-examined and washed out again, and some definitive repair is done here. Patients with injuries that prevent them from returning to the battlefield will then be evacuated to Level IV care in
Landstuhl Regional Medical Center (LRMC) in Germany. This is where some definitive fracture repair and abdominal surgery is performed. From LRMC, patients are then evacuated to the Continental United States (CONUS) for reunion with family and rehabilitation from their injuries. It is not uncommon for a wounded soldier to be in Germany less than 24 hours after sustaining their injury on the battlefield in Afghanistan. ==Campaign participation==