USA — Evacuation Team Carries Wounded Warriors Home

RAMSTEIN AIR BASE, Ger­many, April 26, 2011 — By many accounts, 20-year-old Army Spc. Dustin Mor­ri­son is a liv­ing mir­a­cle – and a tes­ta­ment to the mil­i­tary med­ical sys­tem that’s get­ting med­ical care to wound­ed war­riors and mov­ing them to pro­gres­sive­ly advanced lev­els of care faster than ever before.
Mor­ri­son, an Iowa Army Nation­al Guards­man, was severe­ly wound­ed April 11 when his mine-resis­tant, ambush-pro­tect­ed vehi­cle struck an impro­vised explo­sive device in east­ern Afghanistan’s Pak­tia province.

Ramstein Air Base, Germany
Kel­li Ped­er­sen looks on as Air Force Staff Sgt. Matthew Wor­sham, a res­pi­ra­to­ry tech­ni­cian with the crit­i­cal care air trans­port team, pre­pares her son, Army Spc. Dustin Mor­ri­son, for an aeromed­ical evac­u­a­tion flight from Ram­stein Air Base, Ger­many, April 26, 2011, for fol­low-on care at Wal­ter Reed Army Med­ical Cen­ter in Wash­ing­ton.
DOD pho­to by Don­na Miles
Click to enlarge

Army Spc. Brent Maher, the vehi­cle gun­ner, was killed, and two oth­er mem­bers of the Iowa Guard’s Com­pa­ny B, 1st Bat­tal­ion, 168th Infantry, 2nd Brigade Com­bat Team, 34th Infantry Divi­sion, were injured in the attack. 

When Morrison’s moth­er, Kel­li Ped­er­sen, flew to Ger­many after her son was flown here, the staff at Land­stuhl Region­al Med­ical Cen­ter laid it on the line about his prog­no­sis. “They told me how very close we came to los­ing him,” she said. His lungs were so severe­ly dam­aged from the blast that the staff put him into a med­ical­ly induced coma. But after fight­ing for his life, Mor­ri­son made a break­through when began breath­ing inde­pen­dent­ly two days ago, she said. And two weeks after being wound­ed, he was declared sta­ble enough to trans­port for long-term care at Wal­ter Reed Army Med­ical Cen­ter in Washington. 

Air Force Lt. Col. (Dr.) Ray­mond Fang has seen mir­a­cles like Morrison’s every day for the past sev­en years as direc­tor of trau­ma care at Land­stuhl Region­al Med­ical Cen­ter. Bat­tle­field casu­al­ties are get­ting med­ical treat­ment faster and clos­er to the point of injury than ever before, he told reporters. 

Thanks to advanced aeromed­ical evac­u­a­tion pro­ce­dures, he said, patients now typ­i­cal­ly arrive at Land­stuhl for advanced care with­in three days of being wound­ed. And despite what Fang acknowl­edged have become increas­ing­ly dev­as­tat­ing com­bat injuries, he said 2010 sta­tis­tics show that patients who arrive at Land­stuhl have bet­ter than a 99 per­cent sur­vival rate. 

“That is real­ly unprece­dent­ed,” he said. “So if you are young and you get ear­ly care and you can go through our par­a­digm of staged care and be rapid­ly evac­u­at­ed here, it seems to be effec­tive. … You have a greater than 99 per­cent chance of sur­vival if you can make it to us.” 

Ped­er­son reflect­ed on the med­ical care her son has received as she watched two over­sized ambu­lances deliv­er her son and 40 oth­er wound­ed war­riors to a hulk­ing C‑17 Globe­mas­ter III air­craft on the tar­mac here 

“I can’t even express how well they have tak­en care of him,” she said of the staff. “They have been so pro­fes­sion­al, every step of the way. But beyond that, they have been very hon­est. They’ve been able to take down their guard and be real with us, which has been so impor­tant in help­ing us through this process.” 

Now, as Mor­ri­son was about to move on for advanced care at Wal­ter Reed, Ped­er­sen sur­veyed the bus­tle as the 86th Air­lift Wing’s aeromed­ical evac­u­a­tion team final­ized the air­craft to receive the patients. With Air Force Capt. Anna Cho, a flight nurse serv­ing as med­ical crew direc­tor for the mis­sion, call­ing the shots, the team made final checks that the lit­ter stan­chions were secure and the tubes, cables and wires were prop­er­ly con­nect­ed to the med­ical equipment. 

Then, the team worked with chore­o­graph­ic pre­ci­sion as they began hoist­ing lit­ters from the ambu­lance and car­ry­ing the patients one by one aboard the air­craft and prepar­ing them for the nine-hour flight to Washington. 

“We do every­thing we can to take care of their needs,” said Air Force Senior Air­man Bri­an Fox. “The biggest chal­lenge is stay­ing on top of the pain curve, espe­cial­ly because of the vibra­tion. We make them as com­fort­able as we pos­si­bly can.” 

Mor­ri­son, along with two of the oth­er most crit­i­cal patients, was the last to be car­ried aboard the air­craft, where the aeromed­ical evac­u­a­tion team secured his lit­ter into stan­chions just a foot from his mother’s jump seat. 

Mem­bers of a high­ly spe­cial­ized crit­i­cal care air trans­port team went to work, ensur­ing he was secured as they hooked up a ven­ti­la­tor and med­ical equip­ment they would use to mon­i­tor his con­di­tion through­out the flight. 

Each three-mem­ber crit­i­cal care air trans­port team includes a physi­cian, crit­i­cal-care nurse and res­pi­ra­to­ry tech­ni­cian. They’re trained to treat patients suf­fer­ing from the most severe injuries, and they’re armed with about 750 pounds of high-tech med­ical equip­ment that essen­tial­ly turns an air­craft into a fly­ing inten­sive-care unit. 

“What we do is ensure they have the same lev­el of care as when they were in the ICU at Land­stuhl,” explained Air Force Maj. Kirk Hink­ley, the crit­i­cal-care physi­cian for today’s flight. “That’s the whole pur­pose of a team like this: to ensure there is no step down in care” while the patient is transported. 

Air Force Staff Sgt. Matthew Wor­sham, the team’s res­pi­ra­to­ry tech­ni­cian, knew he would keep par­tic­u­lar­ly busy mon­i­tor­ing Mor­ri­son dur­ing the flight. “We’re going to keep an eye on his vitals, make sure the equip­ment is oper­at­ing prop­er­ly and that his seda­tion lev­els are right,” he said. 

Wor­sham said he felt par­tic­u­lar­ly grate­ful to be able to meet his patient’s moth­er. “That makes this spe­cial. You don’t always get to meet everyone’s par­ents,” he said. As the ramp raised and the air­craft engines fired up, Wor­sham knew he was in for a long, demand­ing mis­sion – but he said he would­n’t trade the oppor­tu­ni­ty to care for Mor­ri­son and his fel­low wound­ed war­riors for any­thing in the world. 

“It’s an hon­or to be able to do this,” he said. “I feel lucky hav­ing the plea­sure of tak­ing care of these guys who have served their coun­try and made all these sac­ri­fices. I have the best job in the Air Force.” 

Source:
U.S. Depart­ment of Defense
Office of the Assis­tant Sec­re­tary of Defense (Pub­lic Affairs) 

Face­book and/or on Twit­ter

Team GlobDef

Seit 2001 ist GlobalDefence.net im Internet unterwegs, um mit eigenen Analysen, interessanten Kooperationen und umfassenden Informationen für einen spannenden Überblick der Weltlage zu sorgen. GlobalDefence.net war dabei die erste deutschsprachige Internetseite, die mit dem Schwerpunkt Sicherheitspolitik außerhalb von Hochschulen oder Instituten aufgetreten ist.

Alle Beiträge ansehen von Team GlobDef →