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    USNMRTC Yokosuka Conducts Mass Casualty Drill, Validates Patient Transport and Air Evacuation Readiness

    USNMRTC Yokosuka Conducts Mass Casualty Drill, Validates Patient Transport and Air Evacuation Readiness

    Photo By Daniel Taylor | ATSUGI, Japan (Sept. 23, 2025) – Medical personnel from U.S. Navy Medicine Readiness...... read more read more

    JAPAN

    09.23.2025

    Story by Daniel Taylor 

    U.S. Naval Hospital Yokosuka

    YOKOSUKA, Japan (Sept. 23, 2025) – U.S. Navy Medicine Readiness and Training Command (USNMRTC) Yokosuka conducted a large-scale mass casualty drill Sept. 23, testing its ability to triage, treat, and transport multiple simulated patients during a crisis.
    The exercise included 10 casualty injects, ranging from a femur fracture with controlled bleeding to complex scenarios such as progressive pneumothorax, cardiac emergencies, and burn injuries. Throughout the day, patients were received, stabilized, and transferred, with the final casualty requiring medical evacuation through Naval Air Facility (NAF) Atsugi.
    In the culminating scenario, medical personnel from U.S. Navy Medicine Readiness and Training Unit (USNMRTU) Sasebo transferred a simulated casualty to Nagasaki Airport, where it was met by a C-12 Huron aircraft assigned to NAF Atsugi and a medical crew from Yokosuka. The aircraft flew to Atsugi, where the patient was offloaded and transported by a USNMRTU Atsugi ambulance to U.S. Naval Hospital Yokosuka for further treatment.
    “This drill gave us the opportunity to test not only our in-hospital care but also our coordination with outside commands, such as Fleet Air Western Pacific, to ensure rapid evacuation when needed,” said Nikolai Kerry, emergency manager at USNMRTC Yokosuka.
    Capt. Torrin Velazquez, commanding officer of USNMRTC Yokosuka, emphasized the importance of integrating new patient transport and aviation evacuation procedures into the command’s training cycle.
    “Testing these new capabilities is essential to building the kind of muscle memory that ensures our teams can respond instinctively when seconds matter,” Velazquez said. “By practicing these processes until they come naturally, we strengthen our readiness and safeguard the lives of those who depend on us. I want to thank every Sailor, civilian, and partner command who played a role in making this exercise successful.”
    Mass casualty drills are designed to prepare medical providers, first responders, and supporting personnel for large-scale incidents such as natural disasters, terrorist attacks, or major accidents. These events test readiness by requiring participants to triage patients, allocate limited resources, and coordinate across commands in time-sensitive situations.
    “While the scenarios are simulated, the pressure is real,” Kerry said. “These drills highlight gaps in our procedures, strengthen teamwork across agencies, and most importantly, help us save lives when an actual emergency happens.”
    The exercise featured realistic injuries on a timed schedule to challenge hospital personnel. Early scenarios focused on orthopedic trauma, such as wrist and ankle fractures, while later patients presented with more medically complex cases, including obstetric and cardiac conditions.
    Drills like these benefit both the Navy and the broader community by improving readiness, refining processes, and ensuring all personnel know their roles in a crisis. USNMRTC Yokosuka conducts mass casualty drills at least once or twice a year, often in partnership with other Navy installations and commands.
    “This kind of training goes beyond the hospital walls,” Kerry said. “By practicing in different environments and with different partners, we ensure we’re prepared for anything—from a disaster on base to a real-world emergency at sea.”
    The day concluded with the successful execution of the simulated transfer from Sasebo to Yokosuka, underscoring the importance of interoperability and rapid response across U.S. Navy medical facilities in Japan.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 09.23.2025
    Date Posted: 09.25.2025 20:23
    Story ID: 549366
    Location: JP

    Web Views: 57
    Downloads: 0

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