The Indian Army has taken a major step in enhancing battlefield medical preparedness with the successful conduct of the โYodha Rakshak Combat Casualty Care Capsuleโ at the Officers Training Academy (OTA), Gaya.
The two-day program, held from August 26 to 27, trained 353 officer cadets and instructors in Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC), a globally recognized system proven to reduce preventable combat fatalities by up to 20%. The training, conducted under the guidance of Army Training Command (ARTRAC), combined interactive lectures with hands-on sessions using advanced medical simulation models, replicating real-time battlefield scenarios.

The initiative was organized in collaboration with the Army Medical Corps Centre and College and the Military Hospital Gaya. Senior Army Medical Corps officers supervised the capsule, emphasizing practical decision-making and rapid response during combat emergencies.

The program also ties into the recently launched โYodha Rakshak Bachav Kit Challenge,โ introduced at ARMEDiCON 2025 in Pune earlier this year, which aims to drive indigenous innovation in military medical kits and reduce reliance on imported systems.

Officials indicated that the success of the OTA Gaya capsule could pave the way for similar training across other military academies, significantly strengthening the Indian armed forcesโ combat medical readiness.