Past Performance
Roll On Roll Off
Surgical Suite
The Prototype Integration Facility (PIF) has a requirement to support the U.S. Army Medical Command in the fabrication and integration of the CH-47 Forward Resuscitative Care System (FRCS), a medical mission package in support of surgical care and resuscitative support for one patient during transport on the CH-47 aircraft. The FRCS consists of one (1) roll-on/roll-off container platform, one (1) secondary equipment/utility trailer, and a to be determined amount of overflow equipment pallets. The FRCS Concept is a combination of The Forward Resuscitation Surgical Team (FRST) which is a rapidly deployable Resuscitative Surgical Team that provides immediate resuscitative surgery, prolonged field care and end-route critical care in support of Joint Special Operations Forces operations. Currently the FRST does not have a specific or designated platform to move the team through the theater nor being able to perform critical surgical intervention in a mobile setting which could consist of certain surgical procedures in air or while loitering on an airfield. The intent of the FRCS is to provide a smaller-scale FRST derivative for faster and more mobile care that would provide similar capabilities as the Forward Resuscitation Surgical Team (FRST) but have a dedicated modular mobile platform built to be deployed on a CH-47 or V-22.
Deployed military medicine is a complex system of interrelated and interdependent systems which provides a continuum of medical treatment from the point of injury (POI) or wounding through successive roles of health care. Within the battle theater, there exist three crucial capabilities to strengthen this continuum of care, first, a robust medical evacuation system, which provides the vital linkage between essential roles of care; and second, en route care capability (ERCC), which is currently a CASEVAC system which provides critical life support enroute to a Role 1 FRST or to a Role 2 full intermediate surgical capable site. The KEY purpose of the FRCS is to provide advanced surgical capabilities as close to the battlefield as possible. The concept of placing a FRCS team as close to the battlefield in a hardened modular surgical suite within designated rotary wing assets will provide lifesaving surgical intervention with minutes of injury vice hours. This capability concept brief will address the movement of surgical capabilities across the rotary wing platforms of a CH-47 and/or the Air Force V-22. This capability can also be staged on current fixed wing assets such as the C-130 or C-17. The concept is to deliver the surgical capabilities to a secured location two to three kilometers outside of the battlefield the surgical team will be prepared to receive casualties requiring immediate surgical intervention.
SBl’s MedconX is a hybrid solution that leverages engineered fabric and recyclable aluminum support arches, insulated composite panel walls and 20’ft. ISO containers. The engineered fabric solution provides the end-user the opportunity to be protected from extreme weather conditions while also housing the entire platform under a single roof. The ISO containers are the base of the enclosure and provide stability for the engineered fabric and composite panel walls. MedconX is modular, scalable, expeditionary and fully customizable based on the end-users requirements or use-case. The system can scale from a Role I BAS (Battalion Aid Station) up to a Role II mobile hospital and beyond as required.
Remote Modular
Clinic Set
Dental or Optometry Deployment Set
Optometry Set
Utilized to provide initial diagnosis and management of eye injuries occurring on the battlefield and detects, diagnoses, treats and manages ocular disorders, injuries, disease and visual dysfunctions in U.S. fighting forces or supported humanitarian missions. Intended for regular or repeated collection, analysis, archiving, interpretation, and distribution of health-related data used for monitoring the health of a population or of individuals, and for intervening in a timely manner to prevent, treat, or control the occurrence of disease or injury, which includes occupational and environmental health surveillance and medical surveillance subcomponents in austere environments.
Dental Set
Utilized to provide initial diagnosis and management of dental injuries occurring on the battlefield and detects, diagnoses, treats and manages dental disorders, injuries, disease and dysfunctions in U.S. fighting forces or supported humanitarian missions. Intended for regular or repeated collection, analysis, archiving, interpretation, and distribution of health-related data used for monitoring the health of a population or of individuals, and for intervening in a timely manner to prevent, treat, or control the occurrence of disease or injury, which includes occupational and environmental health surveillance and medical surveillance subcomponents in austere environments.
AFRC personnel have a unique Disaster Relief mission that calls for standardization of specialized oral care first respond-er emergency equipment. The equipment allows military users to complete vital oral field care operations and failure to equip the warfighter will cause a vulnerability gap to domestic and deployed disaster relief efforts. Commercial
Off-The-Shelf equipment which will be used for oral specific aid of readiness training and real-world application for domes-tic and deployed emergency response.
Through a DLA prime vender the United States provided The Bahamas with a $3.5 million-dollar modular shelter system. The system was designed by SBI can accommodate around 400 people and includes two kitchens and six latrines/shower units, and all of which may be deployed separately or together among several affected islands. The modular units would allow the government to provide shelter to displaced citizens quickly, or to provide accommodation to the disaster response personnel in the case of a hurricane.
The solution set can go to the islands of Grand Bahama, Abaco, Eleuthera, Bimini, Andros, New Providence, Great Exuma, Cat Island, Crooked Island, Acklins, Long Island and Mayaguana.