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    Rising Thunder Guardsmen expand skills with combat lifesaver training

    Rising Thunder Guardsmen expand skills with combat lifesaver training

    Photo By Sgt. Rigo Cisneros | Soldiers of the 2nd Battalion, 130th Infantry Regiment, Illinois Army National Guard,...... read more read more

    YAKIMA, WA, UNITED STATES

    09.03.2019

    Story by Sgt. Rigo Cisneros 

    211th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment

    YAKIMA, Washington – In the Army, Soldiers take courses for career development, promotion points, and additional duty assignments. When training for combat, though, no duty training may be as important and useful as the combat lifesaver course. Here at the Yakima Training Center for Rising Thunder 2019, the Soldiers of the 2nd Battalion, 130th Infantry Regiment, Illinois Army National Guard engage this training as part of their pre-mobilization process.

    The combat lifesaver is a non-medical Soldier who provides lifesaving measures until trained medical personnel can take control of the situation. It may take a healthcare specialist several minutes or longer to reach the casualty, especially if there are other casualties. The combat lifesaver is a bridge between the self-aid and medical personnel.

    “We are trying to maximize the space and personnel here (at Rising Thunder) to ensure our people are CLS-qualified going into mobilization,” said Capt. Adam R. Cunico, commander of Headquarters, Headquarters Company, 2/130th Inf. Reg. “The unit is set to deploy to Afghanistan in 2020.”

    The Army tasks the medical forces to train non-medical Soldiers to become combat lifesavers. Here at Rising Thunder, the 2/130th certifies their own with two class iterations, September 2-3 and 4-5.

    "We teach them the priorities, stop mass hemorrhage, get them to cover,” said Spc. Ryan Decker, a healthcare specialist with HHC, 2/130th Inf. Reg. “We are going further than that though. We want them to know airway, breathing, circulation. That way, if the medic is not there, they can take care of it.”

    These skills apply not only on the battlefield, but in everyday life. Stopping a hemorrhage with a tourniquet is an especially valuable life skill.

    “I was just telling them,” said Decker, “these tourniquets can be purchased online for thirty bucks. You're driving the highway and see a car wreck, pull over and see a guy has had his arm severed off. (With a tourniquet), you can save someone’s life.”

    “The skills we teach are not just for use in the military,” said Pfc. Byron Penny, a healthcare specialist with HHC, 2/130th Inf. Reg. “I'm a drill press operator (on the civilian side) and one night I watched a vehicle shoot past me and disappear around the bend. That just didn't look right to me since it looked like he had turned too fast. I went down and found that he had gone into the ditch and slammed into a tree. I called 911 and told them a military medic was onsite. As I assessed him, I could see a branch sticking out of his chest. I stabilized the branch and tried to control the bleeding. I ruined the shirt I used to stabilize the stick, but at least the guy was alive.”

    A week later Penny discovered from an emergency room doctor that the accident victim had survived. While Penny is a highly-trained healthcare professional, the skills he used that day are the same ones he teaches in the CLS class.

    As more Soldiers become CLS-qualified, more lives will be saved at home and abroad. According to the Department of Defense, one of the most important lessons learned in the last 14 years of war is that using tourniquets and hemostatic dressings as soon as possible after injury is absolutely lifesaving. Unfortunately, uncontrolled hemorrhage remains the single most preventable cause of death in both military and civilian injuries.

    “I think everyone should be CLS qualified,” said Pfc. Tyler Reed, an infantryman with D Co., 2/130th Inf. Reg. “We need everyone trained because you never know what can happen or if there is going to be a medic around.”

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 09.03.2019
    Date Posted: 09.05.2019 01:15
    Story ID: 338437
    Location: YAKIMA, WA, US

    Web Views: 122
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN