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    Iraqi medics learn first responder skills

    Iraqi medics learn first responder skills

    Photo By Staff Sgt. Levi Riendeau | Iraqi medics hold up a mock trauma patient while an instructor explains what areas to...... read more read more

    JOINT BASE BALAD, IRAQ

    02.16.2011

    Story by Staff Sgt. Levi Riendeau 

    321st Air Expeditionary Wing

    JOINT BASE BALAD, Iraq - The first moments after an injury are the most important when it comes to first responder care.

    That’s why medics at the 332nd Expeditionary Medical Group have been teaching Iraqi medics how to take care of trauma patients during those first few minutes.

    “You can have world-class trained plastic surgeons all over this hospital, but it doesn’t do any good if people don’t get stabilized in the field,” said Master Sgt. Kristen Hess, 332nd Expeditionary Medical Operations Squadron.

    A variety of U.S. airmen taught many first responder skills to a class of six Iraqi medics.

    With participation from several Iraqi bases, the three days of training covered everything from basic first aid to applying a chest tube to remove fluids.

    “I tried not to focus on specific equipment we use, because they may have different equipment, and that information wouldn’t be useful to them,” said Capt. Susan Senko, 332nd Expeditionary Medical Group emergency room registered nurse deployed from Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio.

    Instead, most of the training focused on the specific types of injuries trauma victims might receive and the specific techniques that are used to treat them.

    “[The Iraqis] seemed to get the concepts,” said Hess, deployed from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Ala. “They asked very intelligent questions.”

    In addition to formal training, they gave a hands-on portion for most of the training modules.

    The formal training was rounded off with a hands-on exercise on the last day. Trainees were presented with a trauma victim and asked to stabilize them from the accident site to the emergency room.

    There they put their new knowledge to the test.

    “[During the exercise] they were very jelled together as a team,” said Hess, a native of St. Louis, Mo. “You can train all you want to, but at home if you can’t work together as a team, it doesn’t do you any good.”

    All of this training and experience has only a small impact if given just to the six Iraqi medics.

    “One of the goals was to take the information that we gave them and [challenge them] to train others,” said Senko, a native of Forked River, N.J.

    Through this progressive transfer of knowledge, the expertise of the 332nd Expeditionary Medical Group can be passed on to many Iraqi medics who didn’t have the opportunity to work directly with the U.S. medics.

    “For a lot of us, it’s an honor to take what are daily operations for us and give that back to people that, had we never been here, would never have had that opportunity [to learn],” said Hess.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 02.16.2011
    Date Posted: 02.16.2011 08:02
    Story ID: 65510
    Location: JOINT BASE BALAD, IQ

    Web Views: 237
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN