The U.S. Army is working on an autonomous robotic trauma care system that can treat wounded soldiers on the battlefield. The University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and Carnegie Mellon University were each awarded 4-year contracts totaling over $7.2 million to develop the system, according to a news release.
The trauma care in a rucksack, or TRACIR, is envisioned to be a device carried by soldiers in backpacks, Artur Dubrawski, a research professor at CMU’s Robotics Institute, said in an interview. The ultimate goal is to create a fully autonomous system that can be thrown by a wounded warrior, self-inflate, and “crawl” on top of the Warfighter to begin providing medical treatment, he said.
Besides stabilizing the patient mechanically, the suit would also be able to put pressure on bleeding wounds, measure and diagnose a person’s injuries, and insert needles into veins for fluid resuscitation, he noted. Portable ultrasound technology would help the system insert the needles, Dubrawski said.
TRACIR would be especially useful during the “golden hour,” which is the period of time in which medical treatment is the most important for a wounded soldier.