TY - JOUR T1 - Defining capabilities in deployed UK military prehospital emergency care JF - BMJ Military Health JO - BMJ Mil Health DO - 10.1136/military-2022-002159 SP - e002159 AU - Michael Thompson AU - O Jefferson AU - T James AU - B Waller AU - R Reed AU - H Slade AU - K Swift AU - H J Pynn Y1 - 2022/09/06 UR - http://militaryhealth.bmj.com/content/early/2022/09/06/military-2022-002159.abstract N2 - The UK military prehospital emergency care (PHEC) operational clinical capability framework must be updated in order that it retains its use as a valid operational planning tool. Specific requirements include accurately defining the PHEC levels and the ‘Medical Emergency Response Team’ (MERT), while reinforcing PHEC as a specialist area of clinical practice that requires an assured set of competencies at all levels and mandatory clinical currency for vocational providers.A military PHEC review panel was convened by the Defence Consultant Advisor (DCA) for PHEC. Each PHEC level was reviewed and all issues which had, or could have arisen from the existing framework were discussed until agreement between the six members of this panel was established.An updated military PHEC framework has been produced by DCA PHEC, which defines the minimum requirements for each operational PHEC level. These definitions cover all PHEC providers, irrespective of professional background. The mandatory requirement for appropriate clinical exposure for vocational and specialist providers is emphasised. An updated definition of MERT has been agreed.This update provides clarity to the continually evolving domain of UK military PHEC. It sets out the PHEC provider requirements in order to be considered operationally deployable in a PHEC role. There are implications for training, manning and recruitment to meet these requirements, but the processes required to address these are already underway and well described elsewhere. ER -