From a U.S. Transportation Command News Release
SCOTT AIR FORCE BASE, Ill., Jan. 26, 2015 – U.S.
Transportation Command has rolled out a new capability that will allow the
Defense Department to use air transport to move multiple patients with highly
infectious diseases.
Air Force Gen. Paul J. Selva, Transcom commander, introduced
the Transport Isolation System here Jan. 23.
TIS has reached initial operational capability, and crews
are trained and ready to deploy anywhere in the world in response to a biological
event.
The need for such a system came to light During Operation
United Assistance, Transcom officials said. Although a commercial company could
transport patients, its capacity to do so was limited.
Agencies Converge for Quick Results
A convergence of many agencies quickly moved on acquiring
the system, including the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Transcom, Defense Threat
Reduction Agency, Joint Project Manager Protection, Air Mobility Command, Air
Force Life Cycle Management Center and Air Force Operational Test and
Evaluation Center, among others.
The Joint Chiefs approved a Transcom request for urgent
funding in September, and in less than four months, the TIS went from
development through testing and evaluation into production.
Air Force Maj. Gen. John P. Horner, DTRA deputy director;
Barry Corona, president of Production Products; Air Force Maj. Gen. Scott M.
Hanson, AMC director of operations; and Air Force Brig. Gen. (Dr.) Kory Cornum,
AMC command surgeon, joined Selva in the public debut of the system.
“We needed a system like the one you see today,” Selva said.
“In short order, we partnered with our technical experts at DTRA, and in about
120 days from the day we said “Go” to the day we had a flight-tested, ready
piece of equipment, they delivered.”
But it’s more than just a rapid acquisition-to-fielding
success story, Transcom officials said, adding that it also showcases the
initiative and innovation of a small minority-owned business, Production
Products of St. Louis, which manufactured the commercial isolation units that
have been used to air transport patients and now produces the TIS.
“It was a team effort,” Corona said. “Every day, we had
people from Transcom in our shop. Everyone that was on this team made it happen
in an amazingly short period of time.”
Built to Fit on Existing Transport Aircraft
The system is built to fit on existing mobility aircraft,
including the Air Force’s C-130 Hercules and C-17 Globemaster III transports,
and is based on existing military patient support pallets. Each unit has a
disposable liner supported by a metal structure and an air filtration system.
“The infectious disease module provides us a safe way to
bring multiple patients back,” Cornum said.
Compared to the current Production Products system used on
commercial air ambulances, the TIS is modular, buildable and capable of
transporting up to three litter patients or four ambulatory patients in each
module. This allows for flexibility in configuration; the standard
configuration is for two seats and one litter.
Two isolation modules and an anteroom module can fit on a
C-17 or C-130J Super Hercules, and one isolation module and an anteroom module
will fit on a C-130 Hercules. Each module is roughly 9 feet by 7.5 feet, is 8.5
feet tall and weighs less than 1,500 pounds, about the size of a minivan.
The Defense Department has ordered 25 systems from Production
Products, with expected delivery of all units by the end of March. Joint Base
Charleston, South Carolina, has received the first two systems for training and
staging. Additional staging locations for the TIS will be developed following
delivery and based upon ongoing world events, officials said.
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