by Maj. Marnee A.C. Losurdo
403rd Wing Public Affairs
7/14/2014 - KEESLER AIR FORCE BASE, Miss. -- The
Air Force Reserve's 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron and Air
Force's 81st Medical Group participated in the joint medical training
exercise Operation Magnolia Medical Enroute Care Wednesday at Keesler
Air Force Base and the Gulfport Combat Readiness Training Center.
The Keesler units partnered with the Mississippi Air National Guard's
172nd Airlift Wing and its 183rd Air Evacuation Squadron, based in
Jackson, and the 186th Air Refueling Wing, based in Meridian. Training
was also scheduled with the Mississippi Army Guard utilizing their HH-60
and other rotary aircraft, which are frequently used to extract medical
patients in a combat area; however, the helicopter flight had to be
cancelled due to severe weather.
Maj. Kaitlyn Woods, a 53rd WRS aerial reconnaissance weather officer,
said the exercise was cost effective because the Hurricane Hunters were
able to combine their weather training mission, which benefits the
pilots, navigator, ARWO and loadmaster, with the aeromedical training at
the same time.
"This Total Force training exercise demonstrates how aircrews and
medical personnel work together in the field to save lives," said Col.
Frank L. Amodeo, 403rd Wing commander, who added that the aeromedical
evacuation system provides a more than 98 percent survival rate. "While
aircrew and medical personnel have vastly different jobs; these
personnel are able to simultaneously conduct valuable training on the
same flight, epitomizing the 'cost-conscious-culture' initiative."
The objective of the exercise was to complete four separate training
missions with one flight, providing cost-effective and joint training
for medical personnel and aircrew. The event simulated a combat medical
extraction and aeromedical evacuation from a combatant commander's area
of responsibility to a military medical facility all while the 53rd WRS
Hurricane Hunters conducted a simulated storm data gathering mission for
the National Hurricane Center.
The 81st MDG Critical Care Air Transport and Tactical Critical Care
Evacuation Teams need Aeromedical Evacuation teams and aircraft in order
to train. The 183rd AES worked with CCATT and TCCET in the back of
Reserve and Guard aircraft on a simulated patient who was in critical
condition. The training on various medical scenarios was invaluable in
honing skills that may save the lives or limbs of real patients in a
real scenario, said Amodeo.
"As AE we have to fly on multiple airframes," said Tech. Sgt. Megan
Clifton, 183rd AES medical technician. "In one day you could be flying
on three different airframes, so it's good for us to be able to maintain
our currency on all aircraft. We were able to set up a C-17 today, like
we normally do for our training, and we were able to get on a C-130 ...
and move all of our equipment and personnel to a C-130, which is very
realistic; and, we were able to get ground training on a KC-135."
AE crews are often required to move patients from one aircraft to
another in order to get patients to a medical facility for patient care,
she said. Same day training on all three aircraft is very rare, but the
collaborative efforts in Southern Mississippi made it possible.
An AE crew consists of a medical director, flight nurse, and three
aeromedical evacuation technicians. They routinely move critically ill
or injured troops after they've been stabilized or received
damage-control surgery. AE personnel frequently work with Critical Care
Air Transport and Tactical Critical Care Evacuation Teams. CCATTs
consist of a doctor, intensive care nurse and respiratory therapist.
This specialized medical team operates a portable intensive care unit.
TCCETs consist of an emergency medicine or critical care physician, a
nurse anesthetist, and emergency or critical care nurse who provide
emergency critical care in most rotary and fixed wing aircraft.
The joint training was very beneficial, said Lt. Col. Stan Martin, 183rd AES flight nurse.
"When we do get deployed, we all work together as one big team, the
active duty, the Reserve, and the Guard, so it's very rewarding to be
able to do these kinds of missions," he said.
"The beauty of it is, in the event we go to Afghanistan or God forbid
another natural disaster here on the Coast again like a Katrina, we'd
all work together," said Col. Paul Nelson, chief of 81st Aerospace
Medicine, who assisted in organizing the exercise. "We'd work together
for our medical side and our line side, everybody coming together to do
realistic training so if we are called upon, we could do the mission."
Not only was the training beneficial for several military organizations
but was also convenient due to the proximity of all the air assets
involved. The Guard and Reserve conduct 88 percent of the AE mission,
primarily using C-130s, C-17s and KC-135s, all of which participated in
this exercise.
"This exercise not only demonstrated the multi-missioned capabilities of
the WC-130J aircraft, but also highlighted the uniqueness of the South
Mississippi area by providing every possible element of training for
medical enroute care in one state," said Amodeo. "The amount of
resources and medical expertise demonstrated here cannot be duplicated
in very many parts of the world."
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