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    Medical crew takes flight, injured out of fight

    Medical Crew Takes Flight, Injured Out of Fight

    Photo By Master Sgt. Andy Kin | Airmen from the 332nd Medical Group Contingeny Aeromedical Staging Facility medical...... read more read more

    JOINT BASE BALAD, IRAQ

    08.18.2010

    Story by Staff Sgt. Kali Gradishar 

    United States Air Forces Central           

    JOINT BASE BALAD, Iraq - Five members of the 332nd Expeditionary Airlift Flight, with the help of other unit comrades, loaded a C-130 Hercules with medical supplies and equipment in preparation for picking up service members at various locations throughout Iraq.

    Lt. Col. Bryan Castle, 332nd EAEF commander, scurried up a center post on the aircraft carefully holding a bundle of folded fabric. With one hand, he grasped the post while securing a carabineer and one corner of the fabric to a hook in the aircraft ceiling. He did this once more with the opposite corner of the fabric and let it fall from his hands.

    The U.S. flag waving above their heads, the five-person crew - medical crew director, a flight nurse and three aeromedical evacuation technicians - were ready to pick up the first set of patients from Baghdad.

    “Today, our load [included] one litter patient, 11 ambulatory patients and three attendants,” said Maj. Marty Maddox, 332nd EAEF flight nurse and reservist deployed from the 36th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron at Pope Air Force Base, N.C. “We had patients that had muscular skeletal problems, we had patients that had swelling in extremities and lymph node problems, and we also had some patients who were having some psychiatric problems [who] came with attendants.”

    As the C-130 aircrew brought the aircraft to a halt on Baghdad’s flightline, it took only minutes before the medical crew and their counterparts on the ground had each patient in the aircraft and buckled in. The aircraft took off once more to pick up the last group of patients in Tikrit, Iraq, before transporting them all back to Joint Base Balad.

    Once on board, the AET's checked the vital signs of the patients, assessed their pain levels, and then settled them in with a sweet pastry treat tied with a bow – a surprise to some of the patients on board.

    “That was actually pretty good,” said one patient after munching down the pastry.

    While the actual time in flight was little more than two hours, the amount of work for such an operation takes much more – from planning locations for supplies and equipment to strategically locating certain patients to provide for better care on board.

    Prior to loading the aircraft, Maj. Lisa Mayo, a flight nurse and MCD for the flight, briefed the medical crewmembers on the patients they would see and their medical conditions. This gave the crew the essential details they needed to know to configure the back of the aircraft.

    We place everything in a strategic location when we load the aircraft to make it more efficient to load and monitor patients, said Senior Master Sgt. Tony Staut, a 332nd EAES aeromedical evacuation technician, or AET, and reserve technician also deployed from Pope AFB.

    Doing so allows for the patients to be comfortable and well-provided for, as well as for the crew to have enough room to operate.

    The ambulatory patients sat in regular passenger seating, and the litter patient was located in the rear of the aircraft to provide room for maneuvering in the cramped space of the C-130. Depending on patient circumstances, some were placed on the left and right of aircraft near certain supplies or away from certain areas of the aircraft.

    The ambulatory patients sat together under the eye of the second AET, Tech. Sgt. Marguerite Hellwich, 332nd EAEF AET. This group of patients endured medical issues ranging from tonsillitis to a dislocated shoulder. The psychiatric patients were placed on the opposite side of the aircraft with Staut, a 17-year AET.

    With psychiatric patients, specifically, we are careful of where they sit, “because we’re in a war zone and we carry weapons, so we want to keep them in one area where we can keep an eye on them,” said Maddox, who has been a nurse for more than 20 years, but a flight nurse for only two. They are seated in a place on the aircraft away from the emergency ax, flight deck and emergency exits, as well as with an AET and their attendant in order to “keep track of what they’re doing at all times.”

    Once on the ground back at Balad, the patients are transferred to various locations – some plan only to make a stop at the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany, while others are transported to medical treatment facilities. With the patients on their way, the medical crew reverses their initial process of loading the aircraft, taking off all the equipment and supplies.

    Lastly, the crew takes down the American flag, careful not to let it touch the ground. They fold it into a tight, neat triangle, ready for it to be unfurled for the next aeromedical evacuation mission.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 08.18.2010
    Date Posted: 08.18.2010 07:03
    Story ID: 54766
    Location: JOINT BASE BALAD, IQ

    Web Views: 77
    Downloads: 6

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