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    DECON team now available on Buckley

    DECON team now available on Buckley

    Photo By Airman 1st Class Gabrielle Spradling | Tom Bocek, Decontamination, Education and Consulting on Nuc/Bio/Chem, signs the...... read more read more

    BUCKLEY AIR FORCE BASE, CO, UNITED STATES

    07.28.2016

    Story by Airman 1st Class Gabrielle Spradling 

    460th Space Wing

    According to Capt. Kaylaen Evans, 460th Medical Group optometry element chief and DECON team chief, there were many aspects involved with the training, including supply inventory, importance of patient decontamination, how to identify contaminants, equipment set-up, including the tent and water access, understanding each person’s role, proper storage of equipment, and the overall process.
    The 460th Medical Group Commander, Col. Matthew Hanson, took the time to watch the 19-person IPPD team perform their final timed exercise, where the goal was to decontaminate mock casualties from a simulated terrorist attack using a weapon of mass destruction.
    “This is one of the best home-station medical response exercises that I’ve seen,” said Hanson. “The training they’ve received is outstanding. We found a handful of very manageable things that we can do to improve our capability that we will rapidly work on. Bottom line is that if a chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear event happened that affected Buckley AFB, we could respond and we could keep the global space wing mission going.”
    Altogether, the team received 16 hours of instruction and training that not only provided them with the know-how to decontaminate patients, but also allowed them to understand the importance of the material they were learning.
    “I was very proud of them, I know they worked hard and were very motivated,” said Evans. “Even in the classroom, they were engaged and asking questions. We are all super happy and pleased with how it all turned out. We all got a better idea of why we do what we do.”
    The team performed all the necessary tasks under the time constraint to become mission-capable and ready to respond to a series of events.
    “We are now fully prepared for any real world event that could happen and we need the capability to decontaminate patients, save lives and also protect our people,” said Evans. “It’s important that we continue to maintain this capability.”
    Even when issues would arise the IPPD team worked together to overcome them and achieve their goal of becoming fully mission capable.
    “The decontamination team was dedicated, professional, as well as innovative,” said Hanson. “When the team found challenges, they worked through a lot of them in real time. They are not afraid to be aggressive and innovative and get ready not a year from now, but be ready tomorrow.”

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 07.28.2016
    Date Posted: 08.08.2016 16:04
    Story ID: 206426
    Location: BUCKLEY AIR FORCE BASE, CO, US

    Web Views: 27
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN