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Journal Article

Citation

Knapik JJ, Graham B, Steelman R, Colliver K, Jones BH. Aviat. Space Environ. Med. 2011; 82(10): 935-940.

Affiliation

U.S. Army Public Health Institute, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD 21010, USA. joseph.knapik@us.army.mil

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Aerospace Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

21961396

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Since the 1950s, the standard U.S. military troop parachute system has been the T-10. TheT-10 is currently being replaced by the newer T-11 system. PURPOSE: This investigation compared injury incidence between the T-10 and T-11 military parachute systems. METHODS: Participants were students in basic parachute training at the U.S. Army Airborne School (USAAS). Students performed their first parachute jumps with the T-11 and subsequent jumps with the T-10. Injury data were collected from routine reports produced by the USAAS. Combat loaded jumps and night jumps were excluded from the analysis since these were only conducted with the T-10. RESULTS: There were a total of 76 injuries in 30,755 jumps for an overall cumulative injury incidence of 2.5/1000 jumps. With the T-10 parachute, there were 61 injuries in 21,404 jumps for a cumulative injury incidence of 2.9/1000 jumps; with the T-11 parachute there were 15 injuries in 9351 jumps for a cumulative injury incidence of 1.6/1000 jumps [risk ratio (T10/T11) = 1.78, 95% confidence interval = 1.01-3.12, P = 0.04]. DISCUSSION: Limitations to this analysis included the fact that the T-11 was only used on the first jumps among students who had likely never previously performed a parachute jump and that aircraft exit procedures differed very slightly for the two parachutes. Nonetheless, the data suggest that injury incidence is lower with the T-11 parachute than with the T-10 parachute when airborne training operations are conducted during the day without combat loads.


Language: en

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