Posted on Aug 6, 2016
MAJ Ceo
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I was doing research on the Army Combat Lifesaver course and found the Marines have a very similar course. Was wondering how many Marines typically take this course? In the Army we send a few per squad in garrison or whole platoons prior to deployment. Also wondering what its like for you, ours is 3 days of slides + some hands on and a written test.
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MGySgt Rick Tyrrell
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I actually took this course in the Marines. We learned more than the basic first aid, draw blood, give IV's... We would be provided with a medic kit. To answer your question only once. The program only lasted a couple years.
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SMSgt Lawrence McCarter
SMSgt Lawrence McCarter
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I was unaware the Marines ever had a course like that although it sounds like a good idea.
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MGySgt Rick Tyrrell
MGySgt Rick Tyrrell
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It was a great idea but short lived. I feel they never gave it a real sho and it was a peace time initiative but would have been nice during the war
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PO3 Assistant Leading Petty Officer (Alpo)
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In battalions now, it's almost standard that we give our Marines CLS classes. We teach them the basics of CUF (care under fire) and stuff such as nasopharyngeal airways, occlusal dressings and tournaquits. We put them under "stress" (I.e. make them run around in flak and do push ups and stuff) and them have them put a tournaquit on their buddy and get them off the X in the "2 minute" time hack. It's pretty great stuff to teach them and they love learning it. We teach them so that they can also start to render care before we (the corpsman) get there if they are closer, saving precious seconds possibly minutes of treatment to the casualty.
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SFC Michael Tucker
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My Battalion had the, then, 1st Force Recon one block to our left and 1st ANGLICO one block to the right of us. So, every chance our S-3 got, they were grabbing guys for all sorts of classes that Recon and ANGLICO couldn't fill. And medical training taught by a few SEAL Corpsmen for a week every quarter and every time we had a Damn stand-down.
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