Ranking Alexa Global: # 6,814,867
Server:Apache...
The main IP address: 74.124.219.71,Your server United States,Los Angeles ISP:Inmotion Hosting TLD:info CountryCode:US
The description :the supplemental ccatt website to the air force portal ccatt page....
This report updates in 23-Aug-2018
Created Date: | 2010-10-21 |
Geo IP provides you such as latitude, longitude and ISP (Internet Service Provider) etc. informations. Our GeoIP service found where is host ccatt.info. Currently, hosted in United States and its service provider is Inmotion Hosting .
Latitude: | 34.108695983887 |
Longitude: | -118.26058959961 |
Country: | United States (US) |
City: | Los Angeles |
Region: | California |
ISP: | Inmotion Hosting |
HTTP Header information is a part of HTTP protocol that a user's browser sends to called Apache containing the details of what the browser wants and will accept back from the web server.
Upgrade: | h2,h2c |
Transfer-Encoding: | chunked |
Set-Cookie: | b10945da290744793d90aed338cb72f3=ef06985e31634cd59112f6155bbd747a; path=/; HttpOnly |
Expires: | Wed, 17 Aug 2005 00:00:00 GMT |
Keep-Alive: | timeout=3, max=100 |
Server: | Apache |
Last-Modified: | Thu, 23 Aug 2018 07:06:08 GMT |
Connection: | Upgrade, Keep-Alive |
Pragma: | no-cache |
Cache-Control: | no-store, no-cache, must-revalidate, post-check=0, pre-check=0 |
Date: | Thu, 23 Aug 2018 07:06:05 GMT |
P3P: | CP="NOI ADM DEV PSAi COM NAV OUR OTRo STP IND DEM" |
Content-Type: | text/html; charset=utf-8 |
soa: | ns1.inmotionhosting.com. systems-notices.inmotionhosting.com. 2018022115 86400 7200 3600000 86400 |
ns: | ns1.inmotionhosting.com. ns2.inmotionhosting.com. |
ipv4: | IP:74.124.219.71 ASN:22611 OWNER:IMH-WEST - InMotion Hosting, Inc., US Country:US |
mx: | MX preference = 0, mail exchanger = ccatt.info. |
thursday, august 23, 2018 tou & privacy policy resources shaggy's resource page ccat books presentations & lectures documentation allowance standard programs and resources ccatt sustainment training ang ang ccatt training allowance standard 887n adult as 887n alerts 887n inventory management iv pump awis propaq m and md ambit pca codman & icp express easy io glidescope impact suction impact 731 vent impact 754 vent istat ltv vents propaq smeed vsb zoll cct 887c tccet as 887c inventory ttp, policies & training ccatt ae general ccat initial course ccat advanced course documentation submission guidelines 3899 mission supportive clinical references cpg's general & mission supportive books & publications general ccat monthly stat reports mission supportive deployment corner copsa & safety alerts books & publications ercc coordinators ccatt who we are the mission news & current affairs ccat initial course ccat advanced course know the rules osf community community portal my profile members list groups a critical collaboration-ecmo transport cpl meyers' thank you message usaf care in the air exceeds expectations doctors learn to transport wounded back from war after the battle: the bandage mission airmen transport soldier suffering from respiratory failure when u.s. marine cpl. michael meyer woke up at university of iowa hospitals and clinics in early may, he remembers being told, “you’re in iowa.” his first thoughts were “where?” and “why?” iowa, meyer would find out, was a key destination on a road to recovery from severe respiratory failure that nearly took his life. how he ultimately came to the ui is a story of personal strength, family devotion, and the collaboration between ui heart and vascular center specialists and medical personnel from the u.s. army, navy, and air force. for the 23-year-old meyer—a bright, dedicated, and physically fit marine from florida who could easily finish a 15-mile run while he was stationed at camp schwab on the island of okinawa, japan—what had begun as a cough in early march quickly progressed to a serious lung infection. during a training mission on march 13, meyer felt winded to the point where he could barely stand. immediately he was evacuated to u.s. naval hospital okinawa. “i sat down in a wheelchair, and they started taking off my boots. the next thing i know, i was being sedated,” meyer recalls. “i went from an oxygen mask to anesthesia. i don’t remember a whole lot after that.” despite being placed on a ventilator (breathing machine) and receiving powerful antifungal and antibiotic medications, meyer’s health grew worse. his condition was critical, according to his mother, laurie meyer cox, of pensacola, fla. the marine corps had contacted cox and meyer’s father after the marine was hospitalized and arranged travel visas and transportation for the parents to be at their son’s bedside. “being a nurse myself, i knew what the vent settings meant,” cox says. “michael needed a lot of oxygen. he was fighting for his life, yet he continued to get sicker and sicker.” several days later, meyer “blew a hole in his lung,” cox says, referring to a pneumothorax, or collapsed lung. it was the first of several serious complications that had the hospital staff working around the clock to keep meyer alive. read more... the aeromedical evacuation of a u.s. marine, march 26, who suffered complications from pneumonia marked the first ever extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, or ecmo, transfer performed with an adult in the western pacific region. an ecmo provides cardiac and respiratory oxygen support to patients with damaged or diseased heart and lungs that can no longer function for themselves. to complete an ecmo a surgeon inserts tubes into the large blood vessels of the patient. with the help of blood thinners to prevent clotting, the machine will then pump blood through the patient with a membrane oxygenator, removing carbon dioxide and adding oxygen, returning it back into the patient. the marine was being cared for at the lester hospital intesive care unit, camp lester, okinawa, for several days before being transferred to kadena air base and then boarding a c17 that would take him to recieve specialized treatment in hawaii. the medical team transporting the victim was composed of not only air force critical care air transportation nurses, but also army soldiers who are part of the tripler army medical center joint medical attendant transport team. although the medical team members did not belong to the same branch of service as the patient, they came together to perform what needed to be done to help save his life. read more... aviation week & space technology jim mathews monday, 28 july 2014 http://aviationweek.com/defense/usaf-s-care-air-exceeds-expectations usaf’s ‘care in the air’ exceeds expectations u.s. armed forces quietly made medical history in march, when statisticians recorded zero combat-related fatalities among american service members deployed in afghanistan. to be sure, the pace of operations has slowed from its peak a few years ago and that can partly account for the drop, but forces continue to engage and troops continue to be in harm’s way. in fact, during that record-setting march, seven american battle injuries were severe enough to require aeromedical evacuation. so far in 2014, 23 u.s. service members have died, and 93 suffered battle injuries that prompted an air evacuation. even so, the statistics for the duration of the wars show that the risk of dying in combat for u.s. military personnel wounded in afghanistan and iraq was almost half that faced by service members wounded in vietnam in the 1960s and 1970s, and about 45% of that for world war ii combatants. while there are many reasons for this—simple things such as soldiers’ improved self-care and buddy-care training along with widespread adoption of tourniquets play a role—perhaps the most decisive has been a shift in thinking about how to use helicopters, turboprop transports and long-range airlifters to project very sophisticated and complex medical care deeper into the battlespace than ever before, even to the point of injury. we have spent 13 years developing the most complex and the most effective by far deployed trauma system in the history of warfare,” says air force col. (dr.) mark ervin, a general surgeon who oversees the medical aspects of three air mobility command programs that fuse airpower with doctors, nurses, medics and technicians. the critical care air transport team (ccatt) (see www.ccatt.info ), the tactical critical care evacuation team (tccet) (see http://ow.ly/zt1zc ) and en route critical care programs send surgeons, trauma nurses, nurse-anesthetists, operating-room technicians and paramedics far forward to deliver care comparable to that received in an intensive-care unit or a level i trauma center emergency room, either at the point of injury or in the air. it is difficult, complex and—until these conflicts—unheard of. “part of why we’re so good today is [nearly] 14 years of practice,” says air force brig. gen. (dr.) kory cornum, air mobility command surgeon. cornum, a pilot and an orthopedic surgeon by training, shares the concern of many in the military medical community that with the coming drawdown, maintaining that combined clinical and aeromedical evacuation know-how could be a challenge. read more... cincinnati — the soldier on the military cargo plane struggles to breathe. he developed pneumonia while serving in afghanistan and needs medicine now, but the pump to deliver it won't work properly. "i can't believe i'm still messing around with this pump," the nurse says, speaking on a headset because the three-person crew is surrounded by the constant roar of jet engines even as she struggles with the thin air at 30,000 feet. but those engines aren't real. the "plane" is a simulation center deep inside the university of cincinnati medical center , the pump failure orches
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/main-menu-resources/shaggys-resource-page/allowance-standard
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/main-menu-resources/general/mission-supportive
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/main-menu-resources/allowance-standard/887n-adult-as
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/main-menu-resources/allowance-standard/887n-adult-as/ltv-vents
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/ccatt/news-a-current-affairs/327-cpl-meyers-thank-you-message
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/main-menu-resources/ttp-policies-a-training/ae
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/component/users/?view=reset
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/main-menu-resources/clinical-references
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/main-menu-resources/allowance-standard
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/main-menu-resources/shaggys-resource-page/documentation
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/main-menu-resources/ang/ang-ccatt
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/ccatt/know-the-rules/osf
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/main-menu-community
http://www.ccatt.info/media/rokgallery/7/7f63d7a6-b744-4f34-b8c0-827feca54fdb/6987b2e3-b55c-4921-97b6-bc24e9b15897.jpg
http://www.ccatt.info/index.php/main-menu-resources/documentation/3899
Whois is a protocol that is access to registering information. You can reach when the website was registered, when it will be expire, what is contact details of the site with the following informations. In a nutshell, it includes these informations;
Domain Name: CCATT.INFO
Registry Domain ID: D35121573-LRMS
Registrar WHOIS Server:
Registrar URL: www.tucows.com
Updated Date: 2018-03-29T11:50:40Z
Creation Date: 2010-10-21T13:37:00Z
Registry Expiry Date: 2019-10-21T13:37:00Z
Registrar Registration Expiration Date:
Registrar: Tucows Domains Inc.
Registrar IANA ID: 69
Registrar Abuse Contact Email: [email protected]
Registrar Abuse Contact Phone: +1.4165350123
Reseller:
Domain Status: ok https://icann.org/epp#ok
Registrant Organization: John-Michael Fowler
Registrant State/Province: HI
Registrant Country: US
Name Server: NS.INMOTIONHOSTING.COM
Name Server: NS2.INMOTIONHOSTING.COM
DNSSEC: unsigned
URL of the ICANN Whois Inaccuracy Complaint Form is https://www.icann.org/wicf/
>>> Last update of WHOIS database: 2018-08-23T07:05:15Z <<<
For more information on Whois status codes, please visit https://icann.org/epp
Access to AFILIAS WHOIS information is provided to assist persons in determining the contents of a domain name registration record in the Afilias registry database. The data in this record is provided by Afilias Limited for informational purposes only, and Afilias does not guarantee its accuracy. This service is intended only for query-based access. You agree that you will use this data only for lawful purposes and that, under no circumstances will you use this data to(a) allow, enable, or otherwise support the transmission by e-mail, telephone, or facsimile of mass unsolicited, commercial advertising or solicitations to entities other than the data recipient's own existing customers; or (b) enable high volume, automated, electronic processes that send queries or data to the systems of Registry Operator, a Registrar, or Afilias except as reasonably necessary to register domain names or modify existing registrations. All rights reserved. Afilias reserves the right to modify these terms at any time. By submitting this query, you agree to abide by this policy.
Please query the RDDS service of the Registrar of Record identified in this output for information on how to contact the Registrant, Admin, or Tech contact of the queried domain name.
REFERRER http://whois.afilias.info
REGISTRAR Afilias Global Registry Services
SERVERS
SERVER info.whois-servers.net
ARGS ccatt.info
PORT 43
TYPE domain
DOMAIN
NAME ccatt.info
HANDLE D35121573-LRMS
CREATED 2010-10-21
STATUS
ok https://icann.org/epp#ok
NSERVER
NS.INMOTIONHOSTING.COM 74.124.210.242
NS2.INMOTIONHOSTING.COM 70.39.150.2
OWNER
ORGANIZATION John-Michael Fowler
ADDRESS
STATE HI
COUNTRY US
REGISTERED yes
The following list shows you to spelling mistakes possible of the internet users for the website searched .