The study that I quoted, about two deaths out of 63, was actually in the first 20 months of the war. In fact, it's important to realize that almost all the deaths that occurred from Kandahar occurred in the pre-hospital setting. The tactical combat casualty care that we had implemented, which is a pre-hospital way of caring for patients, was actually well entrenched at that time already. The use of tourniquets was probably the most life-saving. So for that reason I think there wasn't a huge change in the potentially preventable death rate. I think it was quite low right at the outset; that's what our study showed. There was little room for improvement in the pre-hospital death rate.
Evidence of meeting #74 for National Defence in the 41st Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was chaplain.
A recording is available from Parliament.