
Medical Capability in Close Protection — What Every Protection Team Should Have
In this article
- Minimum medical standard for close protection officers
- Medical kit: what FFGR teams carry
- The principal medical profile: what the team needs to know
- Medical evacuation planning: the routes that do not appear on maps
The security industry's historical blind spot is medical capability. Close protection training programmes spend significant time on threat response, evasive driving, and physical intervention — and comparatively little on the scenario that is statistically most likely to require immediate action: a medical emergency. Cardiac events, anaphylaxis, drug interactions, and trauma from accidents are more likely to require officer intervention than any hostile contact. FFGR integrates medical capability into every deployment above a basic security driver assignment.
Minimum medical standard for close protection officers
Every FFGR close protection officer holds a minimum of First Aid at Work certification, with refresher training every twelve months. Officers on principal-facing roles hold Emergency First Responder (EFR) or equivalent, covering adult, child, and infant resuscitation, AED use, airway management, shock management, and medication administration for common emergency scenarios. For mandates in locations with emergency services response times greater than ten minutes — remote estates, island properties, mountain locations, offshore vessels — FFGR requires at least one Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC)-trained officer on the team.
Medical kit: what FFGR teams carry
The standard FFGR medical kit for a principal-facing assignment includes: AED (automatic external defibrillator), haemostatic dressings and tourniquets, airway adjuncts (NPA/OPA), pulse oximeter, blood pressure cuff, glucose monitoring kit, epinephrine auto-injectors, oral glucose, aspirin, and a comprehensive wound care kit. For mandates in elevated-risk environments, the kit is supplemented with IV access equipment, haemostatic agents, and a portable oxygen system. All kit is calibrated to the principal's known medical profile — a principal with a nut allergy requires epinephrine in a specific location accessible by any officer, not stored in a bag the lead officer carries.
The principal medical profile: what the team needs to know
The protection team must hold a confidential medical brief for every principal. The brief covers: known conditions that could produce a medical emergency; current medications, including any that affect cognition, blood pressure, or coagulation; allergies and anaphylaxis triggers; blood type; emergency physician contact; insurance and medevac account details; the principal's preference regarding emergency medical disclosure (some principals explicitly do not want local emergency services called before the security team has assessed the situation). The medical brief is compartmentalised — held by the team leader and the operations centre, never shared beyond the mandate. It is updated on every re-engagement.
Medical evacuation planning: the routes that do not appear on maps
For any mandate with elevated medical risk — remote locations, high-altitude environments, offshore vessels, high-threat destinations — FFGR builds a medical evacuation plan that identifies: the nearest emergency department capable of handling the relevant emergency type; the air evacuation provider with confirmed availability in the operating area; the landing zone or helicapable site at or near the principal's location; and the procedures for activating the medevac chain. Many private estates and island properties do not have marked helipads but have space that can function as a landing zone with appropriate ground management. FFGR's advance team identifies and photographs these sites and ensures the pilot brief references them.
Discuss this with a coordinator
If a specific situation in this article is relevant to a current or upcoming requirement, a senior coordinator will respond within sixty minutes — confidential, no obligation.
