September 22, 2011 - Are some service members on the front lines so concerned about the trauma of losing limbs from improvised explosives devices that they are asking “battle buddies” in their units to not give them proper emergency care if they are gravely wounded in combat?That possibility is raised in a new report from a task force appointed by the Army surgeon general to study the complex injuries to ground forces from mines or I.E.D.’s.
With the number of serious wounds to troops on foot having risen significantly in the past two years, the task force said morale had been hurt in some units. The report defined those wounds as including double and triple amputations, as well as pelvic and genital injuries.
“To some, the resultant burden on their family and loved ones seemed too much to accept, and, anecdotally, some actually developed ‘do not resuscitate’ pacts with their battle buddies in the event of this type of injury,” the report, by the Army Dismounted Complex Blast Injury Task Force, said. read more>>>
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