 My name is Second Lieutenant Griffith Perry. I am from Wilmet, Illinois, and I am the Battalion Meadow and Medical Platoon Leader for HHB-15FA. Today, our most junior medics, recent graduates of AIT, will be conducting collective tasks in accordance with deployed medicine guidelines. For this training, four simulated casualties will arrive to their location. They'll practice life-stabilizing measures and then request evacuation to a higher role of care. Why are you eating? The point of the training is to give them exposure to both training at the casualty collection point and then also training within the Roll 1 aid station. It also gives them experience of what is expected of them as junior line medics and then also what could be expected of them as NCOs. So during this training, our non-commissioned officers are providing feedback and evaluation on their performance and it gives them a good idea of where their skills are currently at and what they can improve on in the future. This is important for our junior medics because it gives them exposure to what will be expected of them as line battery medics. Additionally, this is a stepping stone for their progression towards non-commissioned officership.