This week, Aebhric O’Kelly is joined by Antonio from European Medics to discuss his first experience attending the Special Operations Medical Association Symposium, the growing importance of Medical Support to Irregular Warfare (MSIW), and how civilian and military healthcare systems must integrate to prepare for future conflicts and disasters.

Antonio reflects on lessons from occupied Poland, resistance medicine, Ukrainian battlefield realities, and the importance of resilience, logistics, telemedicine, and improvised medicine in modern austere healthcare systems.

Chapters

00:00 Introduction and Antonio’s background

01:10 First experience attending SOMA

03:10 “People over products” in tactical medicine

04:30 Civilian involvement in special operations medicine

06:50 Key lessons from the MSIW track

09:45 What is Medical Support to Irregular Warfare (MSIW)?

11:10 Historical resistance medicine in Poland and the Baltics

15:00 Underground clinics and covert evacuation chains

17:30 Telemedicine in resistance healthcare

18:30 How civilian medics can prepare for MSIW

21:00 TCCC, JTS CPGs, and tactical medicine education

22:00 European Medics Tactical Clinical Operations (TCO) course

23:30 Taiwan, resilience, and whole-of-society defence

26:20 Logistics and manufacturing challenges in conflict

28:40 Relationship building and NATO interoperability

29:10 3D printing and improvised medicine

31:20 Antonio’s passion for guerrilla medicine

34:00 Future plans: anaesthesia, ICU, and flight medicine

35:10 Advice for new medics entering austere medicine

37:00 Closing remarks


Episode Highlights

First impressions from the SOMA Symposium

Why “people over products” matters in tactical medicine

Civilian-military integration in modern conflict

What MSIW (Medical Support to Irregular Warfare) actually means

Historical resistance medicine in Poland and the Baltics

Lessons from Ukraine and occupied territories

Underground clinics and covert casualty evacuation

Telemedicine and distributed healthcare networks

Why civilian clinicians should learn TCCC

Logistics, supply chains, and local manufacturing during war

3D printing and improvised medical equipment

The future of European resilience medicine

Advice for new medics entering austere medicine

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