 The shock trauma platoon at Ford Operating Base, Edinburgh is a roll-to-medical facility. They receive the patients from the point of injury, stabilize them, and then get them to a higher level of care. We sort of sit on the outskirts of our area of operation. There are many guys that are injured that they didn't have a place like Bob Eddie for roll-to. He might not have made it back enough. Made up of 30 sailors from Alpha Surgical Company, Second Maintenance Battalion, Second Marine Logistics Group forward, the team has cared for more than 150 patients with injuries ranging from lacerations to gunshot wounds to improvised explosive device blasts. As a roll-to facility, they can do basic medical care which includes IVs and blood work, but they can also perform surgeries for more critically injured patients. You see a lot of patients, but it's the one out of a hundred that comes in that is literally a death store that we do an intervention on that allows them to make it to a higher level of care and stand the art treatment and the best chance possible to hang out. Before patients can leave Bob Edinburgh, the doctors, nurses, and corpsmen must work together to ensure they are comfortable and stable enough to make the flight to a roll-three hospital. The credit to comforting our patients truly goes to the nurses and the corpsmen. Because when we're busy looking at extremities or looking at neck injuries or looking at various essential things, the nurses and the corpsmen are always right there. They're the ones that are providing that constant comfort and care. And my hat is off. Reporting from Forward Operating Base Edinburgh, Afghanistan, I'm Marine Sergeant Rachel Moore.