This invention relates, in general, to stretchers for carrying injured people and is especially, but not exclusively, applicable to person-specific stretchers for soldiers and other security personnel deployed in theatres of war. More particularly, the invention relates to a modular stretcher component for attachment and integration into a modular-load bearing system.
Serious personal injury is an occupational hazard for armed service personnel. Indeed, irrespective of their wearing of body armour (such as bullet-proof vests at the like), serious trauma can still be sustained from shrapnel, bullets and bombs blasts.
At the present time, a team of men in a hostile environment will be provided with a nominated stretcher carrier who will be responsible for carrying a pre-packed, lightweight stretcher (typically made from a nylon sheet having carry handles attached on either side at the top middle and bottom of the stretcher). As will now be understood, such stretchers are little more than sheets of material on which an injured servicemen is placed and then evacuated the treatment. Emergency field stretches are not designed to be either comfortable or necessarily the most ergonomic for weight distribution, but rather are entirely practical and fit for purpose only.
In the event that someone is injured, the likelihood is that the stretcher will actually not be with the individual (but rather the assigned ‘medic’), so recovery of the injured soldier is immediately compromised. Furthermore, with severe trauma, the injured soldier may be bleeding profusely and potentially have large open wounds that are susceptible to the ingress of dirt and other foreign objects (notwithstanding the likely presence of the initial shrapnel or bullet that caused the wound).
Assuming that a stretcher is available and that the injured soldier can eventually be man-handled onto the stretcher (which is no easy task given that blood and guts are slippery), there is then the problem of physically evacuating the injured soldier to a safe area for treatment; this is easier than it sounds. Specifically, under fire, stretcher-bearing comrades will need to carry and/or drag the laden stretcher across a terrain strewn with debris, not to mention other hazards from ongoing fighting. Furthermore, it is not beyond the realm of possibility that an injured soldier will be supported by only one or two comrades who will be tasked with safely evacuating the injured soldier and all his kit (bearing in mind most will still be worn) to a treatment area or some form of vehicular transport. And furthermore, the comrades might well have to move the injured soldier on his stretcher whilst moving on their haunches.
It is therefore not unusual for the injured soldier to be literally dropped from their stretcher, and for subsequent difficulties to a rise in trying to reposition or just generally secure (at any time) the injured soldier to the stretcher. For example, the nature of the injury may mean that the injured soldier is flailing their arms around, with such action at firstly affecting any attempts to secure or maintain the soldier on the stretcher. With time, the fabric of the stretcher becomes slippery with human blood and entrails, so any delay brought about by physically resting, taking cover or simply moving the injured soldier in an non-optimum fashion causes increasing handling difficulties for the stretcher-bearers and an increased risk of the injured soldier falling off the stretcher.
Even if one had the benefit of a nearby air ambulance, valuable time is still lost in locating the injured soldier on conventional stretchers and in getting to the air ambulance.
In relation to modern uniform, MOdular Lightweight Load-carrying Equipment (or MOLLE) is a current generation of load-bearing equipment and rucksacks utilized, especially, by the British and US Armies. The MOLLE system's modularity is derived from the use of PALS webbing, i.e. rows of heavy-duty nylon stitched onto the vest. The webbing allows for attachment of various MOLLE-compatible pouches and accessories. This method of attachment is the de facto standard for current modular tactical gear, replacing the click-and-stick system used in the earlier modular vest systems
According to a first aspect of the invention there is provided a modular stretcher system comprising: a pouch having a releasable outer cover and an inner surface; a stretcher comprised from a lightweight sheet material, the stretcher stored within the pouch; wherein the stretcher is accessible upon release of the cover, the stretcher further including at least two integrated load-bearing system fixings that engage the lightweight sheet and extend through inner surface.
In another aspect of the invention there is provided a protective anti-ballistic jacket including: an integrated load bearing system on an outer surface thereof; and the modular stretcher system according to any preceding claim, wherein said at least two integrated load-bearing system fixings are coupled to the integrated load bearing system on the outer surface of the jacket.
In a preferred embodiment the integrated load bearing system is a MOLLE system and secure coupling is achieved between the stretcher and the jacket by interleaving webbing straps into a webbing grid.
In a further embodiment each pouch including a half-body stretcher, wherein:
the first pouch includes a half-body stretcher for supporting, at deployment, a head of an injured person; and the second pouch includes a half-body stretcher for supporting, at deployment, a lower torso region of the injured person; wherein the webbing grid of the jacket is between the first pouch and the second pouch, the jacket thereby forming an integral part of the stretcher by supporting, at deployment of the half-body stretchers, a mid-rift section of the injured person.
The half-body stretcher in the first pouch may be coupled to the jacket along an upper edge of webbing straps in the webbing grid only, and the half-body stretcher in the second pouch is coupled to the jacket along a lower edge of webbing straps in the webbing grid only.
Advantageously, the present invention provides a system that is permanently and personally associated with every soldier. Upon injury, the integrated stretcher can be broken out of its storage pouch and is deployed immediately under the back of the injured soldier. At worst, the injured soldier is potentially rolled over onto their side to access the stretcher pouch, which avoids having assisting comrades physically move the injured soldier on to a stretcher. Moreover, by virtue of the fact that the stretcher storage pouch is fixedly coupled onto the vest, body armour or harness (rear or front, as the case may be) and the injured soldier is still wearing the vest, body armour or harness, the injured soldier is intrinsically attached to the stretcher in a fashion that means that he is unlikely to become disconnected from his personal stretcher. Consequently, if during evacuation the stretcher is unfortunately dropped, then the stretcher bearers do not need to worry about having to get the injured person back onto the stretcher before evacuation can continue. Valuable time is saved and the ease of removing the injured soldier to an area for treatment improved.
Beneficially, a preferred embodiment of the present invention may be implemented as a retrofit to existing MOLLE-supporting systems or articles of clothing.
These and other features, advantages, and objects of the present invention will be further understood and appreciated by those skilled in the art by reference to the following specification, claims, and appended drawings.
The point is that a personalised stretcher (reference numeral 60 of
In terms of deployment, the alternative approach to attaching to an army issue jacket (interchangeably referred to as a vest) is to initially roll and store the pre-packed stretcher in its pouch 20 and only clip it to the corners of the MOLLE grid (of the jacket or rucksack) at the point when injury has occurred; this in-field retro-fit means that the casualty is still secure to the stretcher via their vest, harness or belt at the point on evaluation.
Turning to
In terms of alternate design options, rather than to have the grab handle attached to the outer cover, the stretcher may be folded and packed such that the handles 62 of stretcher 70 extend through slits in the cover, e.g. an X-shaped corner to corner slice that is weakly resealed or re-sewn. Thereafter, grabbing and pulling directly on the handles 62 of the stretcher 70 ruptures the X-shaped (or centrally, i.e. middle) seam and allows the stretcher to be immediately deployed.
In a fully integrated system, it is contemplated that the integral stretch is located in the rear pouch utilised for back armour plate. Egress would be again controlled by a specific grab handle or the handles of the stretcher, with the stretcher permanently secured into the jacket. MOLLE strap connections could therefore be omitted on the basis that the stretcher was attached securely using a different fixing methodology.
Furthermore, it is also contemplated that the two pouches could, in fact, be provided to serve an upper torso region and a lower abdominal region, with a remaining central portion of the stretcher realized by the reside strength of the jacket. In this respect, a retrofit system would therefore make use of a partial upper stretcher having two MOLLE strap connectors positively engage in only the upper line of webbing loops of
For the avoidance of doubt, whilst the preferred embodiment makes use of MOLLE to implement attachment, other modular system approaches are equally applicable. Consequently, the term MOLLE should not be interpreted in the specification to be limited (unless the specific context demands strict compliance), but rather that it relates to an integrated load-bearing system incorporated into a jacket, harness, belt or other similar article of attire used by a serviceman.
While a first embodiment of the present invention realises a personal stretcher formed into a back pack accessory that can be secured on to MOLLE using, for example, pop studs, it is also contemplated that a personalised stretcher can be integrated directly into a vest, body armour, plate carrier, bullet-proof vest or flak jacket at the point of manufacture. Clearly, first embodiment permits a retrospective approach to providing a personalised integrated stretcher for use, especially, in combat conditions.
It will be understood that unless features in the particular preferred embodiments are expressly identified as incompatible with one another or the surrounding context implies that they are mutually exclusive and not readily combinable in a complementary and/or supportive sense, the totality of this disclosure contemplates and envisions that specific features of those complementary embodiments can be selectively combined to provide one or more comprehensive, but slightly different, technical solutions.
It will, of course, be further appreciated that the above description has been given by way of example only and that modifications in details may be made within the scope of the present invention. For example, whilst the release mechanism is described as a single grab handle at one end of the stretcher enclosure, it is contemplated that the opposing grab handles at the top and bottom could directly pull out the deploy the integrated stretcher.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1120407.0 | Nov 2011 | GB | national |