Scenario-based MARCH and TCCC emergency training for organizations sending employees, aid workers, and field teams abroad. Practice realistic decisions before care is far away.
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Remote site visit. A team member has a deep lower-leg wound with rapid bleeding while evacuation is delayed.
Correct priority: stop life-threatening extremity bleeding before moving deeper into the algorithm.
Tempting, but MARCH prioritizes massive hemorrhage because uncontrolled bleeding kills fastest.
Customer names and reviewer identities will be added only when they are ready to be public. Until then, MedReady focuses on visible validation criteria buyers can inspect.
Reviewer names, credentials, and last-reviewed dates will be published when the customer launch package is finalized. For now, the site states the review workflow without inventing public identities.
Medical training content needs a visible review process. MedReady separates public reference material, scenario logic, and completion records so organizations can understand exactly what employees practiced.
Protocol content is reviewed by the MedReady clinical team against current CoTCCC and PHTLS references before publication. Public learning pages display review dates where available.
Learning pages link to source bodies and use structured article data so safety managers can audit what guidance a module was built around.
MedReady certificates document scenario practice and decision-making performance. They are training records, not clinical licensure or a replacement for hands-on accredited instruction.
Built by combat medics and emergency nurses with real deployment experience. Every scenario follows current TCCC guidelines and is designed to build decision-making confidence through realistic repetition.
Work through the complete Massive Hemorrhage, Airway, Respiration, Circulation, Hypothermia algorithm under pressure. Each step presents timed decision points with real clinical consequences — incorrect choices trigger realistic deterioration, teaching responders why sequence matters. MARCH is the primary triage algorithm used by military medics, PHTLS-trained first responders, and pre-hospital trauma teams worldwide. MedReady's scenario engine applies MARCH across dozens of casualty types and environments, ensuring trainees understand the protocol as a flexible decision framework rather than a memorised checklist.
No two training sessions are the same. MedReady's scenario engine generates unique patient presentations by randomising mechanism of injury, casualty demographics, vital signs, available equipment, environmental conditions, and bystander behaviour. This prevents trainees from memorising fixed answer sequences — the core failure of traditional e-learning modules. Statistically, responders who train across varied scenario presentations make faster and more accurate triage decisions under genuine stress than those who have rehearsed a single walkthrough. The engine currently supports hundreds of distinct scenario combinations across the MARCH, TCCC, and acute emergency modules.
Three difficulty tiers — Corporate Traveler, Field Responder, and Medical Professional — ensure every team member trains at the right level. Corporate Traveler focuses on recognition, basic hemorrhage control, and calling for help. Field Responder adds tourniquet application, airway management, and MEDEVAC procedures. Medical Professional introduces full MARCH sequencing, drug administration decisions, and complex multi-casualty triage. The system tracks performance across sessions and progressively challenges decision-making as accuracy improves — making MedReady equally effective for a business traveler and an embedded trauma nurse on the same corporate team.
Medical emergencies in MedReady are set in the actual environments your employees operate in — not sterile hospital rooms. Scenarios take place at remote mining sites in Sub-Saharan Africa, hotels in Southeast Asia, offshore oil platforms, jungle expeditions, conflict-adjacent NGO compounds, and international airports. Each environment affects what resources are available, how long evacuation will take, and what bystanders can realistically do. Training in context-specific scenarios builds the situational awareness that generic first aid courses cannot provide — preparing responders for the real decisions they will face, not abstract protocols.
The Medical Kit Builder is an interactive module that teaches responders what to carry, why each item matters clinically, and how to use it correctly under pressure. Kit recommendations are customised by destination risk level, team size, role (corporate traveler vs. embedded medic), and available resupply. Items covered include tourniquets, hemostatic gauze, chest seals, nasopharyngeal airways, SAM splints, and evacuation communication devices. The module also flags common kit failures — expired items, counterfeit tourniquets, and missing components — so teams can audit their existing gear against evidence-based standards before deployment.
The Organization dashboard gives safety managers a real-time view of team readiness: individual scenario completion rates, performance scores by protocol and difficulty tier, knowledge gap analysis, and training frequency trends. Every completed session generates an audit-ready record that documents what was trained, when, and how well. This evidence base supports corporate duty-of-care obligations under ISO 31000, travel risk management frameworks, and insurance requirements for high-risk deployments. Safety managers can identify which team members need refresher training before deployment and demonstrate due diligence to HR, legal, and insurers with a single exportable report.
Here's what a training scenario looks like. You're making decisions under pressure — just like in the field.
Scenario: You're at a remote mining site in Mozambique. An excavator has rolled, trapping a worker's leg. He's been freed by coworkers and is lying on the ground, screaming. You arrive with your trauma kit. There's significant blood pooling around his right thigh. His coworkers are panicking.
The patient is conscious but pale. Pulse is rapid and weak. What is your first action?
Start free. Scale when your team is ready.
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