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Medical Department, Department of the Army, Department of 16. Hudson IL, Blackburn MB, Staudt AM, et al. Analysis of casual-
Defense, or the US Government. ties that underwent airway management before reaching Role 2
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Acknowledgments 185(Suppl 1):10–18.
The authors acknowledge the Department of Defense Trauma 17. Schauer SG, Naylor JF, Fisher AD, et al. An analysis of 13 years of
prehospital combat casualty care: Implications for maintaining a
Registry (DoDTR) for providing the data for this study. ready medical force. Prehosp Emerg Care. 2022;26(3):370–379.
18. Glenn MA, Martin KD, Monzon D, et al. Implementation of a
Ethics combat casualty trauma registry. J Trauma Nurs. 2008;15(4):
The US Army Institute of Surgical Research (USAISR) regu- 181–184.
latory office reviewed protocol H-20-015nh and determined 19. O’Connell KM, Littleton-Kearney MT, Bridges E, Bibb SC. Eval-
it was exempt from Institutional Review Board oversight. We uating the Joint Theater Trauma Registry as a data source to
obtained only de-identified data. benchmark casualty care. Mil Med. 2012;177(5):546–552.
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monia in the ICU [published correction appears in Crit Care.
Author Contributions 2016;20:29. Zai, Wendy [corrected to Ziai, Wendy]]. Crit Care.
SGS is the overall principal investigator for the dataset from 2014;18(2):208.
which this analysis was derived. SGS, ILH, MDA conceptu- 21. Schauer SG, Naylor JF, Oliver JJ, et al. An analysis of casualties
alized the study design. SGS and TD drafted the manuscript. presenting to military emergency departments in Iraq and Af-
SMM, ILH, RAD, MB, and LH provided critical subject mat- ghanistan. Am J Emerg Med. 2019;37(1):94–99.
ter expertise and revisions. All authors contributed substan- 22. Schauer SG, Hill GJ, Naylor JF, et al. Emergency department re-
suscitation of pediatric trauma patients in Iraq and Afghanistan.
tially to this manuscript. Am J Emerg Med. 2018;36(9):1540–1544.
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