Ohio National Guard News

Black Hawk helicopter aids
ANG medical group's training during 2011 Patriot Exercise

Story and photo by Senior Airman Amy N. Adducchio,
178th Fighter Wing Public Affairs

178th Medical Group

Members of the 178th Medical Group, Springfield, Ohio, practice unloading a medical evacuation patient from a running UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter during the domestic operations portion of the 2011 Patriot Exercise July 13 at Volk Field Combat Readiness Training Center, Wis. During the exercise, the 178th MDG received training from Army personnel on the proper procedures for loading and unloading medical evacuation patients, including "hot" loading/unloading, which occurs while the helicopters rotors are moving.


VOLK FIELD, Wis. — Several Airmen from the 178th Medical Group, Springfield, Ohio, learned how to transport aeromedical evacuation patients from a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter during the domestic operations portion of the 2011 Patriot Exercise, conducted July 13-14 at Volk Field Combat Readiness Training Center, Wis.

The 178 MDG staffed an Expeditionary Medical Support (EMEDS) Basic, which is designed to facilitate surgical and primary medical care in a deployed environment. The operation relied on aeromedical evacuation, ambulances and other vehicles to transport patients to and from the EMEDS Basic.

"Since EMEDS's inception, we've never worked with an outside agency like DMAT (Wisconsin's Disaster Medical Assistance Team) or air evac, so this is something new that's brought challenges in itself," said Master Sgt. Donnie Diller, the 178th Medical Group's superintendent of aerospace medicine.

Having an environment where the personnel from the different agencies can perform their roles, side-by-side, provides a clearer perspective of the big picture, Diller said.

"I would say probably 95 percent of (our) people have not been trained on the (helicopter) loads and unloads. For the other five percent, it's probably been years since they've dealt with that," Diller said.

Army personnel trained Airmen on how to safely approach a running, or "hot," Black Hawk to receive immobile patients, and take them to an EMEDS using four-person litter carry teams. They also learned how to load immobile patients. Airmen had the opportunity to practice this training with both mannequins and live simulated patients.

"This whole experience is all about teamwork — being able to work with one another and figuring out how to go beyond the differences that we have be able to work as one unit," said Senior Airman Samantha Rufh, who worked on an aeromedical evacuation litter team. "It's really exciting. I've learned a lot being out here," she said.