Airmen Pitch In To Save UN Blast Victims
Airmen from several Air Force units at Baghdad International
Airport rescued seven U.N. employees injured when a terrorist bomb
exploded outside their headquarters August 19.
Approximately 90 minutes after the attack, 301st Expeditionary
Rescue Squadron officials sent two combat search and rescue teams.
Each team included one pilot and three pararescuemen. They were
joined moments later by another team.
“PJs
(pararescuemen) bring more capability to an accident scene than
most people are aware of,” said one of the team leaders.
“We’re fully certified trauma paramedics who can
perform minor field surgeries, amputations, tracheotomies and (deep
intravenous drips for burn patients).”
They can also operate rescue equipment like the “jaws of
life” and rope pulleys. These skills were put to use the
night of Aug. 19 because other rescuers did not know how to use
some of the equipment.
The team’s first job was to set up and use a rope pulley
to retrieve a bombing victim. The victim was trapped in the rubble
about 15 feet below the closest access point.
“This guy was in bad shape,” said another
pararescueman. “He’d been pinned upside down for more
than two hours. Both his legs were crushed, his right hand was
pretty much destroyed, and he’d lost about 40 percent of his
blood as well.”
It took about 40 minutes to retrieve and fly him to the
coalition hospital, where he underwent the four-hour surgery that
saved him.
“This is where training really pays off,” said Col.
Brian Morr, 447th Expeditionary Medical Support commander. His team
includes 31 medical professionals from 10 bases. “As medical
personnel, we follow the same training plan worldwide, which makes
us an effective team despite having never worked together
before.”
Four of the seven patients were released within 24 hours. Three
others were flown to medical facilities outside Iraq.
Fortunately, the Air Force had the needed medical care.
“Our mobile field surgical team, embedded in EMEDS, has
the capability to perform emergency surgery to stabilize patients
with life-threatening injuries,” said Lt. Col. (Dr.) Craig
Ruder, 477th EMEDS orthopedic surgeon. “We treated his crush
injuries, controlled ongoing bleeding and provided fluid
resuscitation that stabilized his condition.”
Eleven hours after the first rescue team responded, the final
leg of the medical marathon began at the 379th Aeromedical
Evacuation Squadron. The squadron’s mobile aeromedical
staging facility prepared the remaining injured trio for
aeromedical evacuation. Facility flight nurses and medical
technicians cared for the patients.
“The (staging
facility) is basically a hub for all the area’s medical
evacuations,” said Lt. Col. Andy Wolkstein, the
facility’s commander. “We take patients from the
surrounding camps and prepare them for transport. (Aug. 19), we
already had 61 patients scheduled for transportation to Germany; so
we added that first critical patient and a critical care air
transport team at the last minute.”
During the 1991 Gulf War, military leaders learned they needed a
way to move critically injured patients quickly to better-equipped
medical facilities, Morr said. So, they developed the transport
teams.
While the capability has been a theory for a while, it became a
reality during operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom, said
Master Sgt. Mike Jones, a respiratory therapist assigned to the
team.
“We used to only be able to transport stable
patients,” said Jones. “Now we’re able to
transport patients who have been stabilized and are under intensive
care. That’s a major difference.”
The three-person teams include a critical-care physician,
critical-care nurse and respiratory therapist. The teams set up an
intensive-care unit on the airplane. Each team can care for up to
three critical patients those who require ventilators or up to six
who do not.
This multinational, joint-service team made sure the patients
brought to the airport were safely airlifted to more advanced care
outside Iraq.
“This was a total-team effort,” said Morr.
“Our team consisted of physicians from the Air Force and
Navy; Air Force nurses; and Air Force, Navy and Australian forces
technicians.”