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Role 1, Role 2, DCS and DCR 

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Role 1: Primary Pre-Hospital Care & Stabilisation

Our Role 1 Mobile solutions function as the primary echelon of medical support for dispersed or high-mobility workforces.

 

Deployed via ruggedised 4x4 field ambulances or rapidly deployable modular aid posts, these units deliver comprehensive primary healthcare and Advanced Life Support (ALS) at forward operating locations.

 

Staffed by certified Paramedics or Emergency Nurses, our Role 1 capability extends beyond basic first aid to include advanced airway management, haemorrhage control, and fluid resuscitation. Equipped with cardiac monitors, defibrillators, and a robust emergency formulary, we ensure time-critical physiological stabilisation is achieved within the "Golden Hour," preserving the chain of survival prior to medical evacuation to definitive care.

EPC

Role 2 : Advanced Forward Surgical & Holding

For larger projects or those situated far from established hospitals, our Role 2 Mobile solutions deliver a comprehensive field hospital capability directly to your site.

 

These modular, interconnected facilities bridge the gap between a first-aid post and a permanent hospital, offering advanced capabilities, including damage-control surgery, digital diagnostics (X-ray, ultrasound), laboratory services, and a high-dependency ward for holding and monitoring patients.

 

Staffed by multidisciplinary teams including surgeons and anaesthetists, Role 2 units ensure you have the onsite capacity to manage severe trauma and acute medical emergencies independently, drastically reducing the risks associated with delayed medical evacuations.

Operation Theater
Surgery Tools

Damage Control Resuscitation (DCR): Fighting the Lethal Triad

ntegrated into our trauma response is the protocol of Damage Control Resuscitation, a proactive strategy designed to reverse the "lethal triad" of hypothermia, acidosis, and coagulopathy before they become irreversible.

 

Our medical teams are trained to administer hemostatic resuscitation—using blood products and anti-fibrinolytics early rather than relying on clear fluids—to restore clotting function immediately.

 

This advanced approach ensures that patients sustaining catastrophic haemorrhage are physiologically stabilised rapidly, significantly improving their survival chances during transport or prior to surgical intervention.

EPC

Damage Control Surgery (DCS): Surgery for Survival

Within our Role 2 surgical units, we implement Damage Control Surgery—an abbreviated, life-saving surgical strategy reserved for the most critically injured patients.

 

Rather than attempting lengthy, definitive repairs that a physiologically unstable patient cannot withstand, our surgeons focus on the immediate control of haemorrhage and contamination. This "surgery for survival" approach involves rapid stabilisation, temporary packing, and transfer to an intensive care environment for physiological restoration, allowing for definitive repair once the patient is stable.

 

This capability is the gold standard for managing severe industrial trauma in remote settings.

Surgeons in Operation

Your workforce is your most valuable asset.

Protecting them requires more than a first aid kit; it requires a specialist who can stand firm and deliver advanced care when the nearest hospital is an ocean away

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