BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan - U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Melissa Deardorff, a native of Dumfries, Va., and a flight medic with the 455th Expeditionary Aeromedical Evacuation Flight, guides a Marine onto a C-130 Hercules Jan. 10. The crew of the 455th EAEF treats and transports anyone from broken bones to more life-threatening injuries such as amputations or gunshot wounds. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Cody Barber, Task Force Maverick Public Affairs)BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan –“Prepare to lift! Lift!”

U.S. Air Force 1st Lt. Timothy Talbert shouted these commands to fellow medics who then lifted the Critical Care Air Transport Team patient from an ambulance to a C-130 Hercules because they understood that time was a factor in saving the patient’s life.

 

Talbert, a flight nurse, is part of the 455th Expeditionary Aeromedical Evacuation Flight team on Bagram Airfield, whose mission is to care for and transport patients from one location to another to get them further medical care. 

“Our primary mission is to transport patients anywhere in theater,” said Talbert, a native of Richmond, Va. “We move injured and wounded patients whether they are Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines or contractors. There isn’t a patient we can’t transport.”

The 455th EAEF picks up and treats servicemembers and civilians with injuries varying from anything as minor as a cough to as severe as multiple amputation or gunshot wounds.

They also take patients from Craig Joint Theater Hospital to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, Germany, for a higher level of medical care.

Talbert said they are the medics in-between when referring to the transportation of patients from one location to the next.

“We are a part of a system,” said Talbert. “We are the intermediate area between point A to point B. The transport is vital for the continuity of care and getting the patient to the next step, which might be the life saving step, the diagnosis that they need, or the treatment that they need.”

The mission planning starts upon receiving an aerovac request from the Combined Air Operations Center. The crews of the 455th EAEF have to be airborne within three hours to include multiple briefings, loading and checking approximately 1,800 pounds of equipment and converting the cargo area of a C-130, C-17 Globemaster III or a KC-135 Stratotanker into a flying ambulance or hospital.

“Whenever we are alerted, we have an hour to show,” said U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Martha Maddox, native of Chapel Hill, N.C., and the Medical Crew Director with the 455th EAEF. “During the next two hours we have to brief, load our equipment and get everything checked so when we get to the aircraft, we are ready to go.”

Maddox said that the crew wants everything ready 30 minutes before takeoff and wouldn’t be made possible if it wasn’t for a team effort.

“My crew is amazing,” said Maddox. “They know their procedures backwards and forwards and I would fly with anyone of them anywhere, anytime.”
There are four crews in the squadron and each crew is made up of five personnel. The crews are made up of two nurses and three air medical evacuation technicians.

One technician, U.S. Air Force Senior Airmen Melissa Deardorff, a native to Dumfries, Va., works as the charge on the crew, which details making sure equipment is up-to-date as well as doing pre-flight checks.

“As a flight medic, there is a job you do before you do your medic part,” said Deardorff. “I also have to delegate jobs such as who does the oxygen, electrical, straps and who loads the patients.

“Even though the each person on the crew has a specific job, it’s important for each crew member to know each other’s job, Deardorff added.

“We have to know each other’s jobs,” Deardorff continued. “We have to work like a well-oiled machine.”

The crew has experienced a great sense of satisfaction transporting and caring for about 160 patients during the time in theater.

“It’s something that is hard to describe,” said Deardorff. “… but there is no greater feeling than to take care of one of your own and get them the help they need.”BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan - A patient is loaded onto a C-130 Hercules so he can be flown to another medical facility to receive additional care Jan. 10. The 455th Expeditionary Aeromedical Evacuation Flight crew customizes a C-130 into a flying ambulance that can hold upwards of 50 litter patients. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Cody Barber, Task Force Maverick Public Affairs)BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan - U.S. Air Force 1st Lt. Timothy Talbert, native of Richmond, Va., and a flight nurse with the 455th Expeditionary Aeromedical Evacuation Flight, watches over a patient while the critical care air transport team works to keep the patient alive on a C-130 Hercules Jan. 10. The 455th EAEF picks up and cares for patients from all over Afghanistan. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Cody Barber, Task Force Maverick Public Affairs)BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan -- The American flag hangs while a Critical Care Air Transport Team works to keep a patient alive during flight on the C-130 Hercules Jan. 10. The CCATT is needed for treating the most critically injured patients during an aeromedical evacuation. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Cody Barber, Task Force Maverick Public Affairs)

Last Updated on Wednesday, 18 January 2012 06:02
 

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