379th Air Expeditionary Wing Public
Affairs
SOUTHWEST ASIA – While preparing for her night shift, Air
Force Senior Airman Lanea Trevino noticed something odd about the shower stall
next to hers.
The shower supplies, visible through the
half-opened curtain, had remained untouched for the entire time she had been
there.
"It was strange," Trevino
said. "I had seen nobody else in the facility so it was odd that an entire
set of supplies would be left."
While some might dismiss the empty
shower stall and shower supplies as a case of forgetfulness, Trevino decided to
walk through the facility to be sure. After noticing an occupied female toilet
stall, Trevino knocked on the door and asked the person inside if she had left
her shower supplies.
There was no response.
"I immediately began to
worry," Trevino said. "I could see that she was in the stall but wasn't
moving."
Trevino reached her hand under the stall
and shook the girl's leg but there was no response. She quickly peeked under
the stall and noticed the airman was unconscious. Taking immediate action, she
ran to the nearest trailer and told the first person she saw to call emergency
responders.
"My first instinct was to get
help," Trevino said. "I couldn't tell if she was breathing or not but
I knew that she would need additional medical assistance either way and ran to
get it."
Fearing the worst, she grabbed a male,
who had been walking by on his way to lunch to help her get the unconscious
individual out of the stall. The door had been locked from the inside and the
only way into the stall was to climb over top of it. The male lifted her over
the stall and she opened the door from the inside.
Using a fireman carry, Trevino dragged
the unresponsive female out of the stall and laid her flat on the ground.
Moments later, paramedics from the 379th Expeditionary Medical Group arrived on
scene and begin caring for the individual, who was later diagnosed with severe
dehydration.
Being vigilant and watching out for your
fellow wingman is the responsibility of all airmen, said Air Force Chief Master
Sgt. William Harner, 379th Air Expeditionary Wing’s command chief.
"Trevino displayed the ethos we
expect from all our Air Force teammates," Harner said. "She paid
attention to her surroundings, noticed that something was not right, and acted
accordingly. Her vigilance yielded a life or death result."
Heat-related injuries can include
dizziness, confusion, heavy breathing or unconsciousness, Trevino said.
"It's our duty to look out for each
other,” she said, “especially in the summertime when the heat takes its toll on
your body."
Thanks to Trevino's actions the service
member is due to make a full recovery.
"I would expect anyone else to do
the same for me," Trevino said. "As airmen in the U.S. Air Force, we
are part of a unique family and you never have to have a reason to look out for
your family members."
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