by Senior Airman Jose L. Hernandez-Domitilo
35th Fighter Wing Public Affairs
8/13/2014 - MISAWA AIR BASE, Japan -- When
caring for patients, doctors at Misawa Air Base's 35th Medical Group
use the latest in biomedical equipment to assist in diagnosing or
providing treatment.
Whether it is medical imaging equipment, defibrillators, surgical or
clinical laboratory machinery, these pieces of equipment are likely to
require corrective maintenance at some point in their life span.
When these machines go down, there is a team of experts to look to in order to get their machinery back up and running.
The Medical Maintenance team composed of biomedical equipment
technicians are just that group of experts to call in order to
troubleshoot and repair malfunctioning machinery.
"We must have equipment up and running to provide care to patients,"
said Staff Sgt. Paul Kerkman, 35th Medical Support Squadron
noncommissioned officer in charge of Medical Maintenance.
As highly skilled maintenance technicians, Misawa's BMETs are entrusted
to make sure an estimated 2,000 pieces of medical equipment at Misawa
are in working condition to help serve patients' medical and veterinary
care, as well as DODD schools, and Public Access Defibrillators located
throughout the 35th Fighter Wing.
Servicing equipment with a total value of more than $14 million, the
team has their daily work cut out for them as they average completion of
approximately 300 work orders each month.
"Preventative maintenance is similar to the flight line, it extends
lifespan of the equipment and ensures it is available to providers for
patient treatment." said Staff Sgt. Aaron Becker, 35th MDSS NCO in
charge of Scheduled Maintenance.
While most of the work is preventative maintenance, approximately
one-third of them are unscheduled work orders on equipment that
unexpectedly malfunctions or requires upgrades.
The team is committed to making sure work orders are serviced on a
priority basis order because it often involves equipment that prevents
healthcare providers from fulfilling their job.
"If we don't fix equipment, then providers are cancelling appointments,
or surgeries at times," said Tech. Sgt. Daniel Johnson, 35th MDSS NCO in
charge of Facility Management. "Our job is very critical and in turn
very stressful, but we know if we do our job right, then there is
nothing to worry about."
Being the technical experts in medical equipment repair also means they
need to be ready to respond on site at any given moment.
"We are always on call," Johnson said.
Even during a surgical procedure, technicians need to be able to
emergency respond and come to straighten things out. BMETs may be called
upon to troubleshoot equipment while patients are within the surgical
field or awaiting treatment.
"The buck stops with us," Johnson stated.
If there was ever to be a medical mishap involving any piece of medical
equipment, then any previous maintenance done on it would be
scrutinized. Thus there are no cutting corners when it comes to fixing
up equipment because BMETs are entrusted with dealing with life-saving
technologies. Annual quality assurance inspections conducted by Pacific
Air Forces Medical Equipment Repair Center personnel out of Yokota Air
Base, Japan, audit equipment and programs to ensure proper calibration
and functionality.
Even though BMETs are in the background, they affect every patient that
comes through the 35th MDG because every piece of equipment a provider
uses, the BMETs have evaluated or serviced it prior to issue to the work
center.
In addition to working on the mechanical aspects of equipment, BMETs are
also trained on plumbing, electricity and even computer systems
administration. But, one unique aspect of their job's requirement is
being knowledgeable on certain facets of anatomy and physiology.
When troubleshooting a piece of equipment, communication with the doctor
or operator who is utilizing that machine is key to figuring out what
might need to be corrected.
"This is what sets us apart from other maintenance career fields,"
Johnson said. "When it comes down to diagnosing and troubleshooting a
problem or teaching the clinical application of a medical device to a
doctor, it takes the knowledge of anatomy and physiology in knowing what
it is going to take to get the equipment up and running."
One technician who has seen the ins and outs of BMET at Misawa is Junji
Maruya, a Japanese civilian 35th MDSS BMET, who has worked on base for
27 years. Maruya is a unique asset available to the 35th MDG. He is the
only Japanese national BMET working within the Air Force.
Having been here since the days when the 35 MDG was operating from what
is now the Collocated Club, he has seen the technology expand and
advance.
"My favorite part of this job has been working with all kinds of equipment," said Maruya. "Every day is different."
Though now assisting as a liaison for high priority item repair from
local contractors among other things, he knows they'll always get the
job done or at least find the right person to assist in doing so.
"If you don't see us in the work center then that's a good thing," said
Master Sgt. Robert McNeill, 35th MDSS NCO in charge of clinical
engineering. "That means everything is operational."
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
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