1. Which of the following is a principle of TCCC? d
a. Treat the casualty
b. Prevent additional casualties
c. Complete the mission
d. All of the above
2. Which of the following is NOT one of the three phases
d
of care in TCCC?
a. Care Under Fire
b. Tactical Field Care
c. Tactical Evacuation Care
d. Combat Life Saving Care
3. The preferred analgesia regimen for someone
who
c has wounds that are moderately painful but
not life threatening and that do not keep him
from function- ing effectively as a combatant
is:
a. Morphine IV
b. Morphine IM
c. Mobic and Tylenol ER
d. Aspirin
4. The most common cause of preventable death
on the T battlefield is the failure to use a
tourniquet to control severe extremity bleeding.
5. The best battlefield indicators of shock during Tactical
b
Field Care are:
, TCCC FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE TEST.
a. Heart rate and face color
b. State of consciousness and quality of the
radial pulse
, TCCC FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE TEST.
c. Rapid heart rate
d. None of the above
6. All combat casualties should have an IV started as F
soon as possible.
7. A casualty has sustained a gunshot wound to
the
T chest. He/she should be allowed to take fluids
by mouth if able to.
8. Administering large quantities of fluids to a
casualty
T who has bleeding sites inside the chest or
abdomen may worsen his or her hemorrhage
by diluting clot- ting factors or by interfering
with clot formation at the bleeding site.
9. Antibiotics are recommended for all combat casual-
T
ties who sustain open wounds.
10. Which of the following is NOT appropriate to the Care a
Under Fire phase?
a. Starting an IV
b. Controlling life-threatening extremity
bleeding with a tourniquet
c. Returning fire as necessary
d. All of the above
11. To be most effective at preventing infections, moxi-
a
, TCCC FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE TEST.
floxacin should be given when after wounding?
a. As soon as possible
b. Whenever
c. Within 4 hours
d. None of the above