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thedrifter
03-23-05, 09:44 PM
March 28, 2005

Learning to save lives
Marines get special training to back up corpsmen

By Laura Bailey
Times staff writer


Hospital Corpsman 3rd Class James Pell was rushing toward a badly injured Marine on a Fallujah rooftop last fall when an insurgent popped out of a house and unloaded his AK47 in the doc’s direction.
Pell was hit 11 times and fell two stories onto a nearby rooftop. At least one of the bullets ripped through an artery in his leg, causing massive bleeding.

With no other corpsman on site, a young grunt with India Company, 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines, started working on Pell.

Lance Cpl. James Powers was not a corpsman, but within five minutes, as Pell drifted in and out of consciousness, the Marine applied pressure bandages and tourniquets, secured Pell’s breathing and subdued the bleeding.

Because Powers took part in the Corps’ Combat Lifesaver program, the grunt was able to save the doc.

“He did a good enough job that I’m still standing here talking today,” Pell said from Camp Pendleton, Calif., on March 17. “If he hadn’t been there working on me, I definitely would have bled out right away.”

The Corps wants more guys like Powers — quasi-corpsmen who can patch up wounds on the battlefield when the real docs might not be around.

And as the Corps prepares for this spring’s mega-rotation into Iraq, it’s training more of these mini-medics than ever before.

Camp Lejeune, N.C.’s 2nd Marine Division — heading into Iraq this spring and fall — already has at least one “combat aidsman” per squad. But the goal is to train 4,000 combat lifesavers, an aidsman in every fire team, said Lt. Cmdr. Richard Crabb, medical planner for the division.

When it’s all done, one in four Marines with the division will be able to save a life.

The division is sending hundreds of Marines through their five-day training every month. So far, Crabb said, 1,700 Marines have made it through the course.

And officials say the aidsmen have already put their newfound knowledge to the test.

“The program is absolutely phenomenal. It saves a lot of lives, in my opinion,” said Lt. Cmdr. Brian Hutchison, medical planner for 1st Marine Division at Camp Pendleton.

He said combat lifesaver-trained Marines responded to three out of four of his division’s casualties since the Iraq war began two years ago, either acting as first responders or assisting the corpsman on the scene.

One in six Marines in the California-based division has received the training, Hutchison said.

I Marine Expeditionary Force began experimenting with the training years ago, but it wasn’t until the buildup for Iraq that it kicked the program into higher gear.

The Army, with fewer medics per unit, has been training its troops in similar programs for years. And in the late 1990s, I MEF’s 7th Marines began copying the program.

When 1st Marine Division leathernecks adopted it in the run-up to the Iraq war, they dropped the Army’s program from five days to three. They yanked instruction on water purification and preventive medicine so they could focus on what line units needed most.

“We concentrated on what the actual war fighter would need … Basically, it’s real hands-on stuff for out there in the field when the bullets are flying,” Hutchison said.

Those items include training on triage, hemorrhage control and airway management, to name a few.

Members of II MEF began putting together an unofficial program three years ago on a smaller scale, then officially mandated that Marines from every squad take the course last year.

Also at 2nd Marine Division, aidsmen will start taking special medical bags with them to Iraq. These bags have three times the amount of bandages, dressings and other items that the standard Individual First Aid Kit has. Additional medical items include surgical gloves and a self-adhesive dressing for sucking chest wounds. Eventually, every fire team will get one of the bags, Crabb said.

Setting the standard

The training programs differ throughout the Corps, based on what divisions think they need. On Okinawa, Japan, for example, Marines incorporate field exercises into the course, while at Camp Lejeune, the training is confined to hands-on practice in the classroom.

Officers at Training and Education Command at Quantico, Va., said they are working on long-term plans to standardize the program throughout the Corps.

“We owe the operating forces a service-level solution to this,” said Maj. Bill Clark, the action officer for the program.

Clark said the command will begin to evaluate the different courses used throughout the Corps’ divisions and the Army’s course in order to institutionalize a permanent program and come up with a standard number of aidsmen per unit.

The idea behind the programs is to give every platoon’s corpsman extra help in situations with multiple casualties, said Chief Hospital Corpsman Terry Green, 1st Marine Division’s leading chief petty officer for medical training.

“It’s not uncommon to get hit by [a roadside bomb or rocket-propelled grenade] and suddenly you have four to five casualties right there,” Green said.

“Sometimes, you have one corpsman on the scene and you have four or five casualties. Those combat lifesavers can follow up the corpsman and be an extra set of hands.”

Green said the urban environment in Iraq can slow down evacuation time and extra help is crucial during that waiting period.

“If they get isolated in a building or a room, having a combat lifesaver in that room buys them an extra 15 minutes until a corpsman can get to them.”

The Combat Lifesaver program is essential now that Marines are in an urban fight as opposed to amphibious operations, Crabb said.

“We have been staffed to do amphibious operations. We are not staffed for urban combat, which requires much more medical attention,” Crabb said.

He said the need for more medical help is much greater in urban warfare because Marines can get pinned down in buildings and separated from their corpsmen, and because they can be more spread out.

“They could be strung out over a huge area in an urban combat environment. They could be covering a lot of ground, or they could be pinned down by enemy fire … and have to help each other right there,” he said.

Teaching the essentials

One of the many units set for combat this fall is 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines, which sent large numbers of Marines through aidsman training.

When Marines finish the program, they know a fraction of what corpsmen know fresh out of corpsman school, said Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class William Fetters, who trained the Marines from 3/6.

The idea is that corpsmen will be able to tell a combat lifesaver, “‘Hey, get this done,’ and they’ll do it,” he said.

Fetters said that although the training is nowhere near what a corpsman receives — five days versus six months — the Marines who take it come away with a strong knowledge of first aid and can stabilize a wounded Marine until a corpsman arrives.

After five days of practicing first aid on each other, Marines who took the course said they strengthened the knowledge of what they learned in boot camp with new techniques.

The Marines, almost all lance corporal infantrymen, learned how to prepare and insert an IV, apply pressure dressings and tourniquets, and use the new QuikClot blood-clotting agent to stop bleeding. They’ll also know how to deal with bullet and shrapnel wounds, open fractures, burns, heat exhaustion, sucking chest wounds, and how to ensure breathing with the use of oral plastic airway devices.

“It gets a little more in-depth than boot camp. We may not know everything, but we know enough. It makes it so we can take care of each other and do what we got to do,” said Lance Cpl. Ely Velazquez.

Velazquez said the most useful thing he learned was how to help Marines with gunshots to the legs and arms.

“I’m extremely confident that I could help them and get them right back in the fight,” he said.

Another Marine said the most important thing from the training was to remember to focus on the mission first.

“Concentrate on your job first. Concentrate on the mission. You don’t want to stop in the middle of a firefight to help someone out. That’s why we’ve got corpsmen,” said Lance Cpl. Patrick Goral.

He added that the first step Marines learned is to call the corpsman before doing anything.

Since the group of 3/6 Marines finished the course in February, they plan to review the material regularly by staying in touch with their corpsmen once a month and sharing their new knowledge with platoon mates.

One 2nd Marine Division leatherneck in Iraq said he has not yet used the training in a real-life situation, but feels confident he will remember it if the time comes.

That Marine also said he would feel safe in the hands of fellow Marines who took the course with him.

“I feel confident with my fellow Marines doing first aid on me if I go down. They passed the tests with flying colors. They can all do it easily,” said Cpl. Daniel Cantu with Tango Battery, 5th Battalion, 10th Marines, deployed to Ramadi.

“It’s a good class. I think every Marine who’s deploying here or to other places should be able to take it,” he said.

“It’s good training and it’s good knowledge for when you get out, too.”


Ellie

thedrifter
03-30-05, 05:44 AM
Corpsmen race against time to save lives
Submitted by: 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing
Story Identification #: 2005329144736
Story by Cpl. Rocco DeFilippis



AL TAQADDUM, Iraq (March 29, 2005) -- The sound of a ringing bell means one thing to the corpsmen of the II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward) causality evacuation team–someone is hurt and they have to provide help.

These highly trained ‘devil docs’ stand ready with the Marines of Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 364 to respond to calls from anywhere throughout the Al Anbar province.

Serving as the only dedicated evacuation team in the area of operations, the corpsmen and aircrew fly into the face of danger everyday to bring wounded Marines, soldiers and civilians from the battle field to safety.

“Casualties are a part of war,” said Chief Petty Officer Leonard F. Miller, CASEVAC chief and native of Cleveland. “However, our corpsmen are extremely well trained and working each day to minimize the extents of those injuries. They are saving lives.”

The CASEVAC team works around the clock in 12-hour shifts, with two-man teams assigned to different aircraft. When the call is sounded, the corpsmen run to the birds and take to the air with time as their biggest enemy.

“We train with the principle of the ‘golden hour,’ the time when most patients will die without stabilization,” said Petty Officer 3rd Class Jeremy R. Moore, CASEVAC corpsman and native of Kinston, N.C. “We are always racing the clock, because we loose 15 to 30 minutes on the way to the point of injury. So when we get on the ground, we work as fast as we can to fight shock and fluid loss to stabilize the patient.”

One of the keys to their success lies in the strong bond the corpsmen develop with their partners.

“When you are with the same person everyday, you learn how to work with them,” Moore said. “You start thinking the same, and before long there are no gaps in your action because you can anticipate your partners next move.”

The corpsmen of the II MEF (Fwd) CASEVAC team began their preparation for their important mission long before stepping foot in country. Attending the CASEVAC operational emergency medical skills and Army flight medic schools, the devil docs are highly skilled and proficient.

“This is the best prepared CASEVAC team that has come out here,” Miller said. “They hit the ground running and started doing their job with very little turn over. Training is continuous, even out here, so they are always on top of their game. They are the best corpsmen I’ve ever had.”

Humble, in light of the importance and magnitude of their mission, the team is full of men and women who just want to do their part.

“You get a great sense of pride knowing that you helped to save someone’s life,” said Petty Officer 3rd Class Travis J. Hess, corpsman and native of Henniker, N.H. “Ever since I went into field medicine, I’ve wanted to be doing this.”

“This is the primary function of a corpsman, risking your life to save to save another’s,” Moore said.

Since their arrival here two months ago, the team has answered more than 40 calls for help. The corpsmen don’t discriminate, they fly in to treat Marines, soldiers, civilians and even enemy prisoners of war.

“You don’t think about the fact that you are treating a guy who was shooting at you a few moments earlier,” Hess said. “You treat everyone the same, provide the same care regardless of their status or service.”

None of the corpsman want see Marines and soldiers get hurt, but according to Miller, they know the importance of doing their jobs to the best of their ability.

“The CASEVAC mission gives unit commanders the confidence to carry out their mission,” he said. “In the back of their minds they know their Marines are going to be taken care of immediately with a dedicated CASEVAC team.”

With these proud corpsmen standing ready, the service members on the ground fighting to secure peace and stability for the people of Iraq can rest just a bit better, knowing that help is only a bell ring away.


Ellie

yellowwing
03-30-05, 06:38 AM
“The CASEVAC mission gives unit commanders the confidence to carry out their mission,” he said. “In the back of their minds they know their Marines are going to be taken care of immediately with a dedicated CASEVAC team.”

I really like that attitude. Some PFC from Long Island that has dreams of a Silver Star does something really stupid and gets himself hurt.

Hopefully he gets no one else hurt. But these highly motivated, truly dedicated, teams of medical professionals are at the stand by to pull his azz out of the fire.

God Bless Them! And God Bless the Marine Corps to Inspire such devotion to Duty, Honor, and Country!

thedrifter
03-31-05, 10:31 PM
Sliver of Vietnam Odyssey Visible in Photographs of Marine
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By David Foster
The Republican News
Mar. 31, 2005

"Corpsman: Usually a young, long-haired, bearded Marine-hatin' sailor with certain medical skills, who will go through the very gates of hell to get to a wounded Marine." -USMC Maj. Gene Duncan

"Corpsman up! Corpsman up!" Those words, yelled by Marines over the din of battle, in the heat of combat, have brought forth instant responses of courage and caring from U.S. Navy-trained emergency combat medics across the years. While feuding between Marines and sailors ("jarheads and squids) is stuff of legend, the loving side of the love-hate relationship is no-where better seen than in the way a corpsman tends to a wounded "grunt."

Marine Corps veteran and local resident Bill Schrider, who resides in the Bittinger area with his wife Jean, witnessed countless examples of the bravery of Vietnam-era corpsmen, helicopter pilots, and the Marines they rescued, often under enemy fire. Schrider served one year of his full Marine Corps career in Vietnam, from February 1967 to March 1968, shooting upwards of 5,000 photographs as one of a small cadre of Marine, Army, Air Force, and Navy photographers who took literally millions of photographs of the conflict from 1962 to 1975.

"I had already been in the service for over 10 years, the first three in infantry before I re-enlisted into the photography option. I went through schools and courses run by the Navy and Air Force, and had been promoted to warrant officer when I was sent to Vietnam," Schrider said. "There were only 25 or so photographers in the entire Corps at any one time, and with my experience the Marines wanted me to run a photo lab over there.

"I thought otherwise; I wanted to get out into the field."

Schrider's wish was easily granted, as he was assigned to the First Marine Aircraft Wing, which was providing air support for Marines fighting in the northernmost portion of South Vietnam. The 1st MAW operated within spitting distance of the enemy border, where names like Hue City, Khe Sahn, Quang Tri, the Rockpile, Marble Mountain, and China Beach became as familiar to Marines as Washington, Baltimore, and Pittsburgh.

"No matter where you were 'in country' you were subjected to enemy fire, were never out of range of mortars or rockets," said Schrider. "Even on my first night there we came under a rocket attack at Da Nang, and I wondered, 'What the hell is going on here?'"

However, the soft-spoken veteran said he had a job to do, a job inspired by the selflessness of the men around him. "The Corps had our own photographers over there because it wanted to put out our version of the war on the ground - the truth, in my opinion - without an anti-war slant," he stated. "I began flying with Navy corpsmen helicopter flights, and my belief evolved from there to see my mission as getting all the credit possible for the corpsman for what the work they were doing."

That work of Navy corpsmen (the Army used the term "medic" for its own combat EMTs) in Vietnam was simple: If assigned to a ground platoon, he was to live as a Marine, walking, eating, sleeping, sweating, smelling, getting soaked by rain and mud, and getting shot by enemy bullets.

Other corpsmen were assigned to helicopters, and would deliver food, ammunition, and supplies to Marines in the "bush." Their aircraft's primary function, however, was to serve as medevac choppers, ready to drop into any landing zone - "hot" or "cold" - at the first call for aid. The corpsmen would help treat the wounded on the field of fire, and continued treatment as they flew to a hospital unit with lives hanging in the balance of minutes and seconds.

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"When a Marine in Vietnam is wounded, surrounded, hungry, low on ammunition or water, he looks to the sky. He knows the choppers are coming…." -Gen. Leonard F. Chapman, former Commandant of the USMC

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"In the morning I'd get assigned to a copter crew, and that crew would fly all day long," Schrider recalled. "You never know what you'd be getting into on any flight. Sometimes in the squadron radio room, before taking off, the crews would listen to the action in the field. You could hear guys calling for medevacs, and we'd be off.

"A typical helicopter crew consisted of a pilot, co-pilot, two door gunners, and one corpsman. While the copter depended on your mission - a CH-34 carried up to six wounded Marines; a CH-46 carried up to 15 wounded; a CH-53 carried up to 40 - most days one aircraft would handle everything.

"A corpsman's job in the field was to patch people up and get them ready to move by stripping off their helmet, guns, and other equipment, because you don't want that stuff rattling around inside a helicopter. A corpsman on a chopper was to get them to a hospital unit, typically 10 to 15 minutes away.

"I saw a lot of guys flying on choppers who wouldn't have made it without the care of Navy corpsmen, on the ground and in the air."

Armed with nothing but a USMC-issue Nikon-F camera and a pistol, Schrider would shoot photo after photo of Marines and their corpsmen buddies "doing their job." The photographer often came under fire as he documented the war, and was himself shot in the jaw at Con Tien. "The corpsmen were great to me, they bandaged me up and were a wonderful bunch of people," is all the soft-spoken veteran said of the wound that earned him the Purple Heart.

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"While they couldn't keep me from getting wounded, they did keep me from getting killed. A great many of us made it home because of a corpsman. We will never forget them." -An American Marine

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At night, after returning from a day of flying, Schrider would either develop his rolls of film to see what he had captured in the heat of those moments, or ship it to a Corps photo lab to the south. "I was in a remote area of Phu Bai for several months, and would work up the film in my own rudimentary lab in a little wooden-sided building with a metal roof. One day a rocket destroyed the building next to it," he said, dryly.

"I was incredibly lucky in Vietnam because if I didn't like something that was going on, or things weren't really newsworthy, I could hop the next helicopter and go somewhere else; the guys on the ground and in the choppers were stuck with what they were doing, but they were doing a great job anyway.

"I was older than most guys over there, I was in my late 20s, but I really admired those 18-, 19-, and 20-year-olds who were really running things. They were fantastic. The same is said of 18- to 20-year olds, and the rest of our soldiers, in Iraq and Afghanistan today.

"War is not something you should have to do, there is nothing romantic about it; but sometimes it is necessary. There are a lot of strong feelings about the Vietnam War, and a lot of misinformation in my opinion. We did not 'lose' the war, and we did do good things while we were there. I saw lots and lots of wounded South Vietnamese soldiers and civilians evacuated out by our guys for treatment at our facilities, sometimes at great danger to the Americans. You never hear about that these days," Schrider observed.

"That's why I feel photography is so valuable, especially in a charged situation like war. You can write books filled with words, draw a graphic description of what you saw - Hemmingway, Ernie Pyle were great at it - but one photo can say it all; words can complement that photo.

"As military photographers we didn't want to interject ourselves into things, we just wanted to put out what the guys were doing - things that I thought were great things."

A number of Navy corpsmen, some probably photographed by Schrider, are named on black granite of the Vietnam Memorial Wall. With them is the name of Marine Cpl. William Perkins Jr., killed at the age of 20 while serving as a combat photographer during an assault by a large North Vietnamese force near Quang Tri. In the course of the attack, an enemy grenade landed near Perkins and three other Marines. They later reported that Perkins immediately shouted, "Incoming grenade!" and without hesitation threw himself on the weapon, absorbed the explosion with his own body, saving the lives of his comrades at the cost of his own.

Our countrymen, our nation's comrades, our enemies, and civilians, all stare back at us across the years in the photos taken by Perkins, Schrider, and others, framed but never completely captured. From Antietam to Cold Harbor, the muddy trenches to Belleau Wood, the Bulge to Iwo Jima, Pusan to the Chosin Reservoir, from the Ia Drang Valley to Hamburger Hill, from Fallujah to Mosul, what they are saying with their eyes, what they have asked through their sacrifices, is known only to them.

How we respond to honor their legacy - those brave young soldiers, dead and alive, and continue their work - is up to us.


Ellie