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    76th ERQS transports injured to more capable medical facilities

    76th ERQS transports injured to more capable medical facilities

    Photo By Master Sgt. David Carbajal | Members of the 76th Expeditionary Rescue Squadron fly during a medical evacuation...... read more read more

    CAMP BASTION, AFGHANISTAN

    12.14.2011

    Story by Staff Sgt. David Carbajal 

    451st Air Expeditionary Wing

    CAMP BASTION, Afghanistan - In a medical community, the term "fever" can indicate an illness or an infection, but in Afghanistan, some patients need fever to survive.

    Members of the 76th Expeditionary Rescue Squadron, nicknamed "Fever," fly into remote combat outposts, forward operating bases and camps to retrieve wounded personnel and transport them to more advanced medical treatment facilities like those at Bagram or Kandahar airfields.

    Since June, the unit has flown more than 475 missions transporting nearly 600 patients. The unit regularly transports U.S. and NATO service members as well as local nations to these hospitals.

    "You can compare us to an ambulance back in the U.S.," said Air Force 1st Lt. Carl Price, a 76th ERQS co-pilot on the HC-130P Combat King. "We can provide immediate medical treatment to injured people while traveling much faster than others can."

    Using HC-130s, Fever provides a capability unlike any other in the area of responsibility.

    "We are the only fixed-wing rescue unit in the AOR," said Air Force Capt. Nicholas Miller, a 76th ERQS pilot. "C-130s can travel much faster than helicopters and have the range to travel anywhere in Afghanistan."

    Timeliness of their response also makes them unique.

    "Our crews can get anywhere in the country, from the time we're notified to the time we land, in two hours or less," said Air Force Lt. Col. Peter Dominicis, 76th ERQS commander. "With our transportability, we can get a patient to a major medical facility within three hours."

    Some of the patients transported by the 76th ERQS are in dire need of medical treatment, but most of them are in stable condition, said Miller, who is deployed from Moody Air Force Base, Ga., and a Cincinnati, Ohio, native.

    The HC-130 also allows the squadron to land in remote areas of Afghanistan to pick up the wounded.

    "Some of the landing strips we fly into are simply dirt roads running in the middle of a town," said Price, who is deployed from Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Ariz., and a Virginia Beach, Va., native.

    The normal runway length for fixed wing aircraft is 10,000 feet, but some of the runways the crews regularly land on are shorter than 5,000 feet long.

    "At one location, the runway is about 3,400 feet long," said Air Force Capt. Adam Kawatski, HC-130 pilot. "This leaves the crew no margin for error to land safely."

    Some of the more remote runways the unit travels to are not secured by a NATO military. For missions like this, the crew relies on the two loadmasters and two pararescuemen to ensure the safety of the crew, patient and the plane.

    The unit also employs a patient transfer practice called "transloading," in a joint effort with other rescue squadrons.

    "This allows us to coordinate a pick up/drop off location where the helicopter unit can meet us, transfer the patient and we fly them to the hospital," said Price.

    If a mission does not allow transloading, the unit also has the unique capability to perform in-flight refueling for helicopters.

    "This helps lengthen the stride of other rescue units," said Price. "By providing them more fuel, they can travel farther while still providing medical care to the patient."

    In the end, the squadron members understand their capability and their impact.

    "We are moving a guy who needs help to a place where he can get it," said Miller. "The first 24 hours are crucial to a patient, and we're increasing their chance of survival by cutting this transportation time."

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 12.14.2011
    Date Posted: 12.21.2011 04:56
    Story ID: 81634
    Location: CAMP BASTION, AF

    Web Views: 468
    Downloads: 0

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