Maintenance window scheduled to begin at February 14th 2200 est. until 0400 est. February 15th

(e.g. yourname@email.com)

Forgot Password?

    Defense Visual Information Distribution Service Logo

    Face of Defense: ‘Dawg Medic’ Lives Up to Call Sign

    Army Medics Provide Care to Military Working Dog in Iraq

    Courtesy Photo | Army Sgt. Laurence Cameron, left, administers intravenous fluids to a military working...... read more read more

    WASHINGTON, UNITED STATES

    06.21.2009

    Courtesy Story

    Defense.gov         

    Army Sgt. Laurence Cameron was given the radio call sign “Dawg Medic” by other soldiers during this deployment, but it wasn’t until a recent mission that the Rock Hill, S.C., native actually lived up to the nickname.

    Cameron, a combat medic with the North Carolina National Guard’s B “Dawg” Battery, 113th Field Artillery, 30th Heavy Brigade Combat Team, was on patrol with two military working dogs June 20, when one of the dogs became overheated.

    Army Sgt. James Harrington, a military dog handler with the 1st Calvary Division’s provost marshal’s office, called for Cameron.

    “The handlers are all trained in dog first aid, but I show the medics how to do it, too,” Harrington said. “That way, they can take care of the dogs if one of the handlers goes down.”

    Cameron immediately got to work on giving intravenous fluids to the dog, named Ryky. “The dog handler explained how to do it, and I went about doing the procedure,” Cameron said. “When it comes to an IV, there is not that much difference between a dog and a human.”

    Although Cameron did not expect to give an IV to a dog, he said, he knew it was a possibility.

    “When I was at training in Wisconsin, I had a drill sergeant that had been a dog handler, and he taught us a little bit about working with the dogs,” Cameron said. “It was interesting to actually get to do it.”

    This was only the third IV the “Dawg Medic” had given to anyone -- or anything -- for overheating since the beginning of this deployment. Overheating is a problem in Iraq because of high temperatures, and soldiers, even the furry kind, must be wary of it.

    “We monitor the dogs’ temperature throughout the patrol,” explained Army Staff Sgt. Christopher Jasper, one of the other dog handlers on patrol. “Once their temperature gets over 102 degrees, we have to start looking at ways to cool them down, and once it gets to 103 or 104, we have to get them an IV.”

    Because of his call sign, some of Cameron’s fellow soldiers also refer to him as “the Veterinarian.”

    “Everyone thought it was funny that I actually worked on a dog because of me being called ‘Dawg Medic’ and ‘Veterinarian,’” he said.

    Cameron was happy to be able to help what he called “a fellow soldier.”

    “It was cool to be able to help out a dog that is there to help us by detecting explosives,” he said. “It’s part of the Army’s battle buddy system. They are soldiers like us; they just have four legs.”

    (Army Sgt. Mary Phillips serves in Multinational Division Baghdad with the North Carolina National Guard’s 30th Heavy Brigade Combat Team public affairs office.)

    Story by Army Sgt. Mary Phillips, Special to American Forces Press Service

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 06.21.2009
    Date Posted: 07.03.2025 17:49
    Story ID: 518504
    Location: WASHINGTON, US

    Web Views: 0
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN