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Saving lives at 30,000 feet

  • Published
  • By 1st Lt Wayne Capps
  • 315th Airlift Wing
Doctors, nurses and medical technicians feverishly rushing around, yelling for pain medication and working on patients in an environment that looks like controlled chaos, sounds like a familiar scene from a popular television drama or even the scene from a busy emergency room. 

The only difference is this scene often takes place at more than 30,000 feet as medical professionals work while flying in and out of a combat zone. 

Air Force aeromedical evacuation crewmembers have conducted more than 55,000 patient moves since the beginning of Operation Iraqi Freedom, caring for a wide range of ailments ranging from gun shot wounds and explosions to sports related injuries. 

“Our aeromedical evacuation system has made it possible to move seriously injured patients in an astonishingly quick time, as short as 36 hours from the battleground to stateside medical care-unheard of even a decade ago,” said Air Force Surgeon General, Lt. Gen. George Taylor in a recent article. General Taylor also stated that robust surgical capabilities at forward locations have been key to the lowest casualty rate in the history of combat. 

Their ultimate goal is to get the patients to definitive care, said Col. Sharyn Roettger, a reservist and commander of the 315th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron at Charleston AFB, S.C. “I am here to do a job…I am here to move the wounded warrior, it’s a satisfying job”, said a determined Roettger. “We all wish no one was injured, but that is just not the reality.” 

According General Taylor, of the approximately 400 aeromedical evacuation personnel world-wide, the majority of them, nearly 88 percent are from the guard and reserve. 

The 791st Expeditionary Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron at Ramstein AB, Germany, the hub for patient movements in Europe and Southwest Asia, is more than 50 percent manned by the guard and reserve. The 791st EAES are responsible for moving patients from hostile areas in Southwest Asia to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany, where many patients receive further medical care and wait to be transported to the U.S. 

According to Lt. Col. Robert Hix, director of operations for the 791st EAES, they move an average of 550 patients a month. “Everybody is doing the job they came here to do, I am proud of the work we do”, he said. 

Colonel Hix is not alone, Capt. Darrell Saylor, a deployed flight nurse working with the 791st EAES, is also proud of the job he is doing. Saylor, an activated reservist stationed at Dobbins ARB, GA with the 94th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron, said the best part of his job is the satisfaction he gets when the young soldiers he takes care of thank him for the care that they get. “I don’t want them to feel like they are just a number, we all do our best to make sure that doesn’t happen,” said Saylor. 

“A couple months ago, we didn’t have many patients so I could spend a little more time with each of them. I took care of this young soldier who lost his sight in an IED (improvised explosive devise) blast. He was pretty helpless,” said Saylor as he reflected on one of his most memorable patients. “His biggest concern was if his girlfriend would still love him. I spent a lot of time talking about life and trying to comfort him. It is rewarding to take them home, very rewarding,” stressed Saylor 

As the Global War on Terrorism rages in the Middle East and around the globe, aeromedical evacuation operation will continue to be one of the key factors in saving the lives of U.S. service members involved in the conflict.