BLUF - The BattleMedQB group has been set up to help students, clinicians and civilians learn the essential knowledge to save lives on the battlefield.
The world is becoming more unstable and conflict is becoming more common. Some medical knowledge and skills can be life saving. We want to spread these essential knowledge far and wide.
UK military clinicians need to study and revise this knowledge for the BATLS course (Battlefield Advance Trauma Life Support). American military clinicians do a similar course called TCCC (Tactical Combat Casualty Care). Both of these courses are similar to the civilian courses ATLS or ETC.
https://www.europeantraumacourse.com/
https://www.rcsed.ac.uk/events-courses/advanced-trauma-life-support-atls
https://www.rcseng.ac.uk/education-and-exams/courses/search/advanced-trauma-life-support-atls-provider-programme/
The BATLS is an essential part of the training and assessment for all British Armed Forces medical personnel. If you want to deploy with the British Armed Forces then you need to show that you are competent to look after injured soldiers. You must pass the BATLS course.
The Problems
The BattleMedQB solution
We believe in working smart, as well as hard.
We have developed this question bank to ensure that you get tested on all of the essential knowledge you will need to not only pass the MCQ and the OSCE but also to be theoretically competent in real life.
Question banks work! You will learn and remember these facts more quickly by answering questions than you will by just reading alone. Educational theory and trials have shown that interactive learning in a gamified scenario increase the speed of learning and retention.
If you join up for the longer membership options then you can make sure you pass the course, stay competent, prepare for your deployments and even revise for your revalidation.
Why have we developed The BattleMedQB Question Bank?
We all went through the BATLS course and deployments the old fashioned way. We got given an A5 leaflet with the BATLS course pre-reading and then we did the course. We did the course while we were tired, stressed and panicking. We passed and then we deployed. However, a lot of what we were taught on the course had to be repeated, quite a few times in our own time, to make sure that we had really memorised it.
The BATLS course is a foundation, it is not the end of the learning curve. But it is a pretty steep start for most people, even if you have done ATLS or 6 months working in ED.
We realised that there had to be a better way to prepare for the course and to learn the material. We also wanted a quicker and more efficient way to keep that knowledge fresh in our minds.
The answer we thought was simple, we would create this question bank and then we would not have any excuse for ever forgetting the BATLS content ever again.
We think its going to be the most useful resource for your BATLS preparation and success!