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    New Partnership Enables Critical Training for New Hampshire Air National Guardsmen

    New Partnership Enables Critical Training

    Photo By Tech. Sgt. Victoria Nelson | Heather Day-Lewis, an emergency department technician at Catholic Medical Center, and...... read more read more

    NEW HAMPSHIRE, UNITED STATES

    10.12.2023

    Story by Tech. Sgt. Victoria Nelson 

    157th Air Refueling Wing

    Beeping machines, quick footsteps, and rolling carts fill the Catholic Medical Center Emergency Department with a chaotic buzz. Among the flow of people and equipment, one Airman from the 157th Medical Group kept pace with the nurses and paramedics bustling from room to room.

    That Airman, aerospace medicine technician Master Sgt. John McDowell, was completing his annual training requirements alongside CMC’s medical personnel in the Emergency Department and Intensive Care Unit in Manchester, New Hampshire, Oct. 9-13, 2023. The opportunity was part of a new partnership that allows New Hampshire Air National Guard medics to hone their skills with patients in the hospital setting.

    “It’s a training affiliation agreement,” said Maj. Michelle Mastrobattista, the Medical Administrative Officer with the 157th MDG. “A method for training with industry partners to complete our critical requirements.”

    The New Hampshire Air National Guard is one of only five other units in the country to create this type of partnership.

    The agreement allows Guardsmen to follow patients from the beginning to end of their emergency care. The Airmen are licensed by the National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians and can perform selected core tasks under the supervision of CMC’s medical staff.

    “They are assigned four rooms with a nurse but if a trauma comes in, or a cardiac arrest, they have one of our walkie talkies, the staff will pull him in to get the exposure,” said Kevin Drew, CMC’s Director of Emergency Services.

    The partnership provides Airmen the ability to practice care with patients from different demographics while accomplishing the necessary training tasks.

    In only one week at the hospital, McDowell saw patients aged newborn to 104 years old. He completed more than 100 core tasks alongside the nurses and paramedics, including blood draws, intravenous lines for medicine or fluids, electrocardiograms, and patient assessments.

    “This is the first time New Hampshire has ever had this opportunity and we could not be more grateful for CMC to be our first partners,” Mastrobattista said. “This experience is far outside of what we can provide in a training environment on base. These are real people and real exposure to what our Airmen may see if they are deployed.”

    Mastrobattista said successful application of their technical skills is necessary in a deployed environment or natural disaster response, but now they do not have to travel far for the in-depth training.

    “This is the shortest commute I have ever had,” laughed McDowell, who lives in Manchester. “Even though I am less than 10 minutes from home, being immersed in the culture here is my biggest take away for adapting in settings like this overseas.”

    McDowell said having the muscle memory of this experience will help Airmen incorporate faster into the pace of hospital teams when deployed.

    Shadowing is also specific to each Airman’s training needs and allows each member to complete their 40 hours of required shadowing and hands-on annual training.

    “The flexibility in this partnership is just one of the huge benefits compared to group training,” said Master Sgt. Meghan O’Regan, an aerospace medic with the 157th Medical Group and training coordinator for the partnership. “Everyone from our newest medics to our most experienced will have a completely unique week tailored to honing their perishable skills.”

    The hospital has worked with the New Hampshire National Guard in the past during pandemic relief missions and while setting up acute care centers across the state. Both teams said the partnership was an easy decision and well-worth the time and paperwork it took to make a reality.

    The collaboration is beneficial for both the Airmen and the hospital but it also has a personal connection for Drew.

    “I was a 19-year-old medic in the Army and had no skills,” he remembered with a laugh. “Someone took the time to help me out and I was able to get to where I am today. Now both of my boys are in the military. I want to make sure we are passing on everything we can and doing as much as we can to support one another.”

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 10.12.2023
    Date Posted: 10.26.2023 15:32
    Story ID: 456616
    Location: NEW HAMPSHIRE, US

    Web Views: 133
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN