by Staff Sgt. Lealan Buehrer
182nd Airlift Wing Public Affairs
2/24/2014 - PEORIA, Ill. -- The
commander of the 182nd Medical Group in Peoria, Ill., returned from a
rare seven-week deployment to Antarctica Jan. 4, where he provided
medical care at the McMurdo Station there.
Two weeks after arriving, Air National Guard Col. Steven S. Norris of
Morton, Ill., found himself in the middle of a mass-casualty event when a
South Korean Kamov helicopter crashed landed and caught fire on the
deck of a research ship.
The doctor deployed to Antarctica as a flight surgeon in support of
Operation Deep Freeze's mission to provide airlift for the National
Science Foundation. There, the Iraq and Afghanistan War veteran with
almost two decades of military service experienced the most limited and
remote working conditions of his career.
Norris had just returned to the station from an all-day mission to the
South Pole on Dec. 4, 2013, when he received word that four helicopter
crash victims were being transported to his clinic from 200 miles away
at Terra Nova Bay. When they arrived, it would become Norris and his
team's job to keep the critically wounded Koreans alive and fly them on a
LC-130 Hercules to the nearest medical center in Christchurch, New
Zealand.
At that point, Norris knew his duty day was far from over.
"I had to prepare the hospital, four different trauma bays, and get
everyone together and assign teams, and do all the stuff you do in
preparation for a mass casualty," he said.
His team that night was one Air Force flight medic and one flight nurse.
The event became part of a 38-hour shift that resulted in saving those
four lives.
The crash victims suffered burns, spine and pelvic fractures, and
internal bleeding. The worst had burns on 40 percent of his body.
When the patient arrived, he was not doing well and his burns were so
severe that his body had swollen, Norris said. "The key in those
situations is to get them to establish a definitive airway, but with his
face and head so swollen, that was very difficult," the doctor
explained.
The crash victims survived, despite the limits and difficulties of
practicing medicine in McMurdo Station's small, desolate arctic
facility.
"It's kind of like an outpatient clinic, or a prompt care, and then some
two or three hospital beds," said Norris. "It's really the only
hospital on the continent."
Besides the clinic's size constraints, materials were also a commodity.
It was a stark difference from Norris's experiences deployed in the
Middle East.
"You have limited supplies. You can't be resupplied. You just have to be
prepared to do everything and be able to stabilize any sort of
situation. You have to be confident in your ability to do that, and be
able to do it, because there's nobody else there," he said.
Norris, however, found dealing with stress to be similar to any other
intense situation he had experienced in his medical career.
"The number one thing is stay calm," he said. "Support everyone around
you so that they feel relaxed and calm, and just concentrate on the task
you have in front of you. I think if the physician is calm and speaks
calmly and doesn't appear to be rattled or in a hurry, then everyone
else feels relaxed."
Norris has had 15 years to practice that philosophy. He received his
doctorate of medicine in 1999 from the University of Illinois College of
Medicine and received a commission in the Air Force the next year.
He also serves in the civilian sector as a hospital physician at
Peoria's OSF Saint Francis Medical Center, having previously worked in
family practice, emergency care and executive leadership positions.
After serving as the 182nd Medical Group's chief of aerospace medicine,
he was promoted to its commander in December 2010.
Norris now oversees 68 traditional and full-time medical specialists
that service the more than 1,100 guardsmen responsible for the 182nd
Airlift Wing's state and federal missions.
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