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Airmen participate in humanitarian exercise in Trinidad and Tobago
Senior Airman Nicholas Dawson fastens straps down medical supplies on a truck April 8, 2011, in Trinidad and Tobago. Airman Dawson is a part of the Expeditionary Medical Support Health Response Team in support of the Allied Forces Humanitarian Exercise/Fuerzas Aliadas. Airman Dawson is a 60th Medical Group medical technician. (U.S. Air Force photo/2nd Lt. Joel Banjo-Johnson)
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Airmen participate in humanitarian exercise in Trinidad and Tobago

Posted 4/11/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by 2nd Lt. Joel Banjo-Johnson
60th Air Mobility Wing Public Affairs


4/11/2011 - CUMATO BARRACKS, Trinidad and Tobago (AFNS) -- More than 150 U.S. military personnel and military and civilian officials from Trinidad and Tobago, United Kingdom, Canada, the Co-operative Republic of Guyana, and the Republic of Suriname gathered here April 8 to participate in the annual Fuerzas Alidas Humanitarias, or FA HUM 2011. It is also known as Allied Forces Humanitarian Exercise.

FA HUM 2011 is conducted to enhance a nation's response capabilities and interoperability with regional and international military forces and humanitarian assistance agencies. This year's two week exercise will simulate a catastrophic earthquake in Trinidad and Tobago, requiring assistance from outside countries.

Officials said the exercise illustrates the United States' commitment to work with regional partners in ways that "strengthen friendships, bolster partner nation capacity, expands cooperation between nations and enhances regional stability."

"We have received great support from the host nation," said Col. John Mansfield, the 60th Medical Group deputy commander at Travis Air Force Base, Calif., and observer for the exercise. "The Trinidad military has been superb in meeting our demands and needs. Our focus is to support the host nation."

Fifteen volunteers from the 1st Engineer Battalion from the Trinidad military acted as patients for the first day of the exercise and the emergency room team treated them within the first 20 minutes.

"Once receiving life saving medical care, patients are transferred to civilian hospitals," Colonel Mansfield said. "The team is thinking about discharge planning prior to the completion of the facility. The facility cannot hold many patients because it does not have the in-patient beds to do so. This is why partnerships with the host nations are so important."

The purpose of a health response team, or HRT, is to stabilize patients, stop bleeding, stabilize limbs and work with the host nation to transfer patients to more long term facilities.

"We are working in conjunction with the Ministry of Health in Trinidad, the Trinidad military, the U.S. Embassy assigned here and several other agencies," said Lt. Col. Michael Bruhn, the deputy chief of the Expeditionary Medical Operations Division at Air Combat Command at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Va. "We started planning about a year ago and have coordinated with the Trinidad army and air guard to ensure rapid transport of equipment."

The government of Trinidad will exercise and evaluate their ability to respond to a disaster, identifying areas of improvement in order to increase their readiness for a major hazard impact. The Trinidad army is also providing the HRT with base operating support to include fuels, meals, billeting and water.



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