The Presidential Citizens Medal, the second highest civilian award of our Government, was established to recognize U.S. citizens who have performed “exemplary deeds of service for our nation.” Past recipients include Hank Aaron, Muhammed Ali, Bob Dole, Robert Gates and Colin Powell. At a White House Ceremony on January 2, 2025, President Biden added Dr. Frank Butler and 19 others to the list.

The White House announcement included this citation: “As a pioneering innovator, Navy SEAL, and leader in dive medicine, Dr. Frank Butler introduced Tactical Combat Casualty Care to the medical world that set new standards for tourniquet use not only for injuries in war but injuries across daily civilian life. He has transformed battlefield trauma care for the United States military and saved countless lives.”

From Navy SEAL To Navy Doctor

Dr. Butler’s career path was unusual, even by the standards of military medicine. A Navy SEAL platoon commander before he became a doctor, Butler’s first medical assignment was with the Navy’s Experimental Diving Unit, where he tested equipment and helped design diving protocols used by navies and special operations forces around the globe. After completing a Navy residency in ophthalmology and practicing for a few years, he returned to the Special Operations community as Biomedical Research Director for the Naval Special Warfare Command, overseeing the health of personnel during training and ensuring that all SEALs were fit for any mission. In the early 1990s, he grew interested in improving trauma care on the battlefield.

The Challenge Of Transforming Battlefield Care

Most combat fatalities die instantly or succumb to their injuries before they reach a medical facility. Because all were thought to be unsalvageable, they were classified as “killed in action” (KIA). As a result, battlefield treatment barely changed for 130 years.

Dr. Butler knew better. He believed that improving battlefield care could boost survival rates. To translate this idea into action, he and like-minded colleagues devised guidelines to address rapid bleeding, airway compromise, and other immediate life threats. They named the strategy “Tactical Combat Casualty Care” (TCCC). Despite the logic of this approach, they encountered stubborn resistance to changing long-standing policies.

When CAPT Butler was appointed US Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) Command Surgeon in 2004, he saw an opportunity to challenge long-held assumptions about KIAs. He asked two trauma surgeons—Colonel John Holcomb, leader of the U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, and Dr. Howard Champion, a civilian faculty member at the Uniformed Services University—to analyze USSOCOM’s battlefield fatalities in Iraq and Afghanistan. Based on official records and autopsy findings, they determined that nearly 15% of the deaths involved potentially survivable wounds, mainly uncontrolled bleeding from injured extremities.

Spurred by these findings, USSOCOM directed that all special operations combatants carry TCCC equipment, including updated tourniquets and clot-promoting battlefield dressings. Two Delta Force medics created the “combat application tourniquet” adopted they adopted after testing by the US Army Institute of Surgical Research confirmed that it reliably stops arterial bleeding. Following widespread adoption of this tourniquet, deaths from extremity bleeding dropped by two-thirds. In the 75th Ranger Regiment, an elite unit that trained all its medics and combatants to a high standard, preventable deaths decreased to zero.

Impact On Casualty Survival

During his 11-year tenure as Chair of the DoD’s Committee on Tactical Combat Casualty Care (CoTCCC), Dr. Butler and his colleagues transformed our military’s approach to battlefield care. TCCC and other innovations devised and deployed during the Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts helped America’s military health system cut the death rate from severe battlefield wounds in half to the lowest level in the history of warfare. Today, TCCC is the standard of care throughout the U.S. military. It’s also been adopted by many allied militaries, government agencies, law enforcement, and a growing number of civilian EMS services.

Accolades From Peers

Dr. Butler’s selection garnered widespread praise from the military medicine community.

Like Dr. Butler, Colonel (retired) Bob Mabry started his military career in Special Operations. A Green Beret medic, Mabry was awarded the Silver Star—later elevated to Distinguished Service Cross—for his heroism during the Battle of Mogadishu. Afterward, he was admitted to the the Uniformed Services University’s School of Medicine and became one of the Army’s top emergency physicians. He worked closely with Dr. Butler to develop and advance TCCC. In response to news of Dr. Butler’s selection, he remarked, “Very few individuals can make contributions that span generations. TCCC has not only saved countless lives over the past two decades; Frank’s work will save the lives of servicemen and servicewomen who are not yet born in future wars yet to be fought.”

Colonel (Dr.) Vik Bebarta, an Air Force emergency physician with four combat deployments who now leads the University of Colorado (CU) Center for COMBAT Research said, “Frank Butler fundamentally transformed battlefield medicine. He and his TCCC colleagues ensured that every U.S. Servicemember has the best chance of survival, even in austere and dangerous environments. His legacy endures not only in the military but also in civilian prehospital care.”

Closing Thoughts

Last year, Dr. Butler and two coauthors compiled a history of the personalities, politics and innovations that powered TCCC’s adoption into a highly readable book. In honor of countless Army and Air Force medics, and Navy corpsmen who’ve received poignant requests from critically wounded warriors to “please tell my family that I love them,” the book is aptly titled, Tell Them Yourself: It’s Not Your Day to Die.

Admiral (Ret) William McRaven, Former Commander of U.S. Special Operations Command and architect of the Osama Bin Laden raid, offered the following observations in the book’s Foreword:

“From the beginning, this seemed like an unwinnable fight. A cast of unlikely heroes: a SEAL turned ophthalmologist, a Green Beret medic, a young Army doctor, and several hard-nosed combat leaders trying to challenge hundreds of years of medical dogma. How could they convince the senior medical community that everything they knew about casualty care was wrong? How could they prove that these new procedures would save lives—and not end them? How, in the most intense fighting since Vietnam, could we completely rewrite the medical books? This is a story with a great ending. And it is a story that represents the best about what makes us Americans. Never in my life have I been so honored to recommend a book to a reader.”

Throughout our nation’s history, innovations devised by military health professionals have been adopted by civilian medicine and public health to benefit patients in the U.S. and worldwide. By honoring Dr. Frank Butler, President Biden also honored the many military health professionals who’ve worked tirelessly to develop, refine, and skillfully deliver Tactical Combat Casualty Care.

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