miércoles, 29 de agosto de 2018

Navy Medicine global health team conducts trauma exchange in Vietnam | Health.mil

Navy Medicine global health team conducts trauma exchange in Vietnam | Health.mil

health dot mil banner image

Navy Medicine global health team conducts trauma exchange in Vietnam

The 13 Navy Medicine members stand together on the first day of the Integrated Trauma and Medical Readiness Exchange engagement in Vietnam. (U.S. Navy photo by Capt. Joel Roos)

The 13 Navy Medicine members stand together on the first day of the Integrated Trauma and Medical Readiness Exchange engagement in Vietnam. (U.S. Navy photo by Capt. Joel Roos)





HANOI, VIETNAM — A team of 13 Navy Medicine trauma members completed a medical exchange Aug. 10 at Vietnam Military Hospital 103.
The 8-week program, called Integrated Trauma and Medical Readiness Exchange (ITMRE), is the first of its kind with Vietnam. U.S. Navy Medicine personnel worked side-by-side with Vietnam Military partners to provided medical care and share comprehensive trauma management techniques. This program is designed to enhance Navy medicine personnel’s ability to rapidly adapt to any environment, build resiliency, and learn the art of working with foreign partners.
“As we prepare our sailors and marines to go into harm’s way, true operational readiness requires partnership the world over,” said Navy Capt. Carlos Williams, director of the Navy Office of Global Health Engagement. “The key to readiness is preparation, and preparation requires that team members are ready to face not only the challenges we know, but be resilient and agile to face the ones we do not.”
The Navy Medicine team comprised an emergency room physician, critical care physician, orthopedic surgeon, anesthesiologist, critical care nurse, emergency room nurse, and surgical technicians.
Navy Medicine participated in this exchange as guests of the Vietnam Ministry of Defense in a longstanding and growing partnership to exchange ideas and increase cooperation between the two nations.
“This project represents a tremendous opportunity to utilize medicine as a benefit to both nations,” said Navy Capt. Joel Roos, mission commander for the engagement. “It allows us to increase medical capabilities for both countries at different levels.”
Over the 8-week period, the U.S. team participated in more than 300 surgical cases and assisted in the care of upwards of 550 complex emergency room and intensive care patients. Approximately 30 hours of medical lectures were provided to the Vietnamese medical team.
Sharing trauma management skills was the focus of this exchange, which encompasses all aspects of trauma care to include pre-hospital care, emergency care, complex surgical repair (orthopedic, neuro, etc.), and post-operative care (critical care, nursing care, burn injuries).
The initiative originated in 2016, when the Vietnam Ministry of Defense requested support refining the trauma patient management system at its medical facilities. Navy Medicine identified an opportunity to conduct a global health engagement mission with a key partner in Southeast Asia. The initiative formed after close collaboration among Navy Medicine personnel stationed in Vietnam, the U.S. Embassy and leadership across the Navy Medicine enterprise.
“Global Health Engagement is about developing persistent and sustained relationships that foster trust, build capacity and bring about positive sustainable change,” Williams said. “To support these objectives, Navy Medicine hopes to expand the pilot to other nations, and to continue sending teams to Vietnam for future cooperative engagements.”
Disclaimer: Re-published content may have been edited for length and clarity. Read original post.




U.S. doctors save Italian patient hours from death

Article
8/8/2018
U.S. Air Force Capt. Melanie Gates, left, Capt. Nick McKenzie, and Capt. Richard Thorsted, all who are Special Operations Command Forward Northwest Africa ground surgical team members, gather for a photo at Nigerien Air Base 101, Niamey. The three doctors recently finished medical school and are serving their first deployment. They are deployed from Travis Air Force Base, California. (U.S. Air Force courtesy photo)
The patient had a fever, a very high heart rate and low oxygen levels
Recommended Content:
Health Readiness | Global Health Engagement | Partners

USNS Mercy returns home following Pacific Partnership 2018

Article
7/24/2018
Navy Hospital Corpsman Tianna Garcia, assigned to Naval Medical Center San Diego, is greeted by her husband Aaron Garcia during the homecoming ceremony for the hospital ship USNS Mercy. The ship and her crew completed a five-month humanitarian relief mission to Southeast Asia. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Indra Beaufort)
Pacific Partnership 2018 included more than 800 military and civilian personnel from the U.S., Australia, Canada, France, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and the United Kingdom
Recommended Content:
Civil Military Medicine | Civil Support | Global Health Engagement | Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief

U.S. Navy, JMSDF participate in bilateral training exercise

Article
6/21/2018
Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) Sailors and U.S. Naval Hospital (USNH) Yokosuka personnel transport a simulated patient during a mass casualty drill in conjunction with hospital ship USNS Mercy and JMSDF personnel. The drill was conducted in order to prepare medical staff for a mass casualty scenario involving a maritime incident at sea. USNH Yokosuka is the largest U.S. military treatment facility on mainland Japan caring for approximately 43,000 eligible beneficiaries. (U.S. Navy photo by Tim Jensen)
The simulated disaster for the training exercise included a Japanese vessel colliding with a U.S. vessel
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement | Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief

Military doctors conduct infectious diseases training in Panama

Article
6/13/2018
Publio Gonzalez, a biologist with the Gorgas Institute, holds a bat in Meteti, Panama. Gonzalez and U.S. military doctors were participating in infectious diseases training, in which they received informational lectures from Panamanian infectious disease experts and field studies of possible virus-carrying wildlife and insects. The event took place during Exercise New Horizons 2018, which is a joint training exercise where U.S. military members conduct training in civil engineer, medical and support services while benefiting the local community. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Dustin Mullen)
Due to the geographic location of Panama, the importance the country places on controlling diseases greatly benefits the Unites States
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement

Project Sea Raven delivers cutting-edge pathogen detection technology

Article
5/31/2018
U.S. Navy Petty Officer 1st Class James Bowes, senior preventive-medicine technician, places mosquitoes on a dish to view under a microscope. Project Sea Raven’s capabilities are not limited to just insects – it can test anything from blood to soil and water. (U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Tom Ouellette)
Project Sea Raven is now an integral part of USNS Mercy’s microbiology capacity
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement | Technology | Military Hospitals and Clinics

Air Force medical team supports exercise in Panama

Article
5/29/2018
Air Force Master Sgt. Emeriles Curry, 346th Expeditionary Medical Operations Squadron dental hygienist, provides dental care to a local man in the Coclé Province of Panama. To date, in 2-weeks’ worth of Medical Readiness Training Exercises, the teams working in conjunction with the Panamanian Ministry of Health, have seen nearly 4,700 patients. The medical team is participating in Exercise New Horizons 2018, which is a joint training exercise focused on medical, civil engineer and support service personnel’s ability to prepare, deploy, operate, and redeploy outside the United States. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Dustin Mullen)
The medical team has been working closely with Panamanian dentists
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement | Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief | Building Partner Capacity and Interoperability

USNS Mercy arrives in Vietnam for Pacific Partnership

Article
5/23/2018
The hospital ship USNS Mercy anchors in shallow water during a Pacific Partnership stop. (PP18). PP18’s mission is to work collectively with host and partner nations to enhance regional interoperability and disaster response capabilities, increase stability and security in the region, and foster new and enduring friendships across the Indo-Pacific Region. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Cameron Pinske)
Pacific Partnership is the largest annual multilateral HA/DR preparedness mission conducted in the Indo-Pacific
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement

Airmen contribute to saving a life during New Horizons 2018

Article
5/17/2018
From left to right: U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Ariel Thomas, 346th Air Expeditionary Group medical technician, Master Sgt. Reina Blake, 346 AEG Office of the Legal Advisor superintendent, and Special Agent Alexandra Garced, Air Force Office of Special Investigations agent, stand for a group photo in Meteti, Panama. Blake, Thomas and Garced are credited with saving the life of a local Panamanian woman after she jumped from a bridge. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Dustin Mullen)
Airmen go above and beyond to save a local woman
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement

New Horizons embedded health engagement provides unparalleled training

Article
5/15/2018
Air Force Capt. (Dr.) Charles Hutchings, 346th Expeditionary Medical Operations Squadron pediatrician, explains information to a local woman near Meteti, Panama, April 17, 2018. Hutchings was part of an embedded health engagement team participating in Exercise New Horizons 2018, which will assist communities throughout Panama by providing medical assistance and building facilities such as schools, a youth community center and a women’s health ward. (Air Force photo by Senior Airman Dustin Mullen)
For medical professionals participating in Exercise New Horizons 2018, hands-on training comes in the form of fully submerging into local clinics
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement

Multinational surgeons participate in first robot-assisted surgery onboard USNS Mercy

Article
5/7/2018
Surgical staff assigned to Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy for Pacific Partnership 2018 and the Sri Lankan surgical team from Base Hospital Mutur connect the probes of the Da Vinci XI Robot Surgical System to a patient during the first robot-assisted surgery while aboard the Mercy. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kelsey L. Adams)
A joint team of multinational surgeons successfully completed a gall bladder removal, using a Da Vinci XI Robot Surgical System
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement | Military Hospitals and Clinics

Navy audiologist contributes to Pacific Partnership

Article
4/17/2018
Navy Lt. Matt Thomas, an audiologist supporting Pacific Partnership 2018, examines a patient's ear during a community health fair at Yap Memorial Hospital in Micronesia. (U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Byron Linder)
One participant can claim to have the most firsthand experience with the Micronesian islands
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement

In it together: Fighting global health threats takes partnerships

Article
4/12/2018
Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs Tom McCaffery spoke at the 2018 Medical Support Operations Conference in London, delivering remarks on the defense sector's role in advancing the Global Health Security Agenda. A partnership of more than 60 nations, the Global Health Security Agenda, or GHSA, brings together the unique roles of governments, industry, NGOs, academia, and international institutions to combat infectious disease threats. “We are up against a perilous rise in infectious disease outbreaks threatening the health and safety of our citizens, as well as threatening geopolitical stability,” stated McCaffery, emphasizing that global health security is an essential part of our national security. “The bottom line is that defense and security sectors have a real opportunity to use the GHSA framework to increase collaboration and converge our unique assets across all sectors to detect and defeat disease at the earliest possible moment," McCaffery said.
McCaffery discusses importance of Global Health Security Agenda in U.K.
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement

2018 Medical Support Operations Conference

Photo
4/11/2018
Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs Tom McCaffery spoke at the 2018 Medical Support Operations Conference in London, delivering remarks on the defense sector's role in advancing the Global Health Security Agenda. A partnership of more than 60 nations, the Global Health Security Agenda, or GHSA, brings together the unique roles of governments, industry, NGOs, academia, and international institutions to combat infectious disease threats. “We are up against a perilous rise in infectious disease outbreaks threatening the health and safety of our citizens, as well as threatening geopolitical stability,” stated McCaffery, emphasizing that global health security is an essential part of our national security. “The bottom line is that defense and security sectors have a real opportunity to use the GHSA framework to increase collaboration and converge our unique assets across all sectors to detect and defeat disease at the earliest possible moment," McCaffery said.
Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs Tom McCaffery spoke at the 2018 Medical Support Operations Conference in London, delivering remarks on the defense sector's role in advancing the Global Health Security Agenda. A partnership of more than 60 nations, the Global Health Security Agenda, or GHSA, brings together the unique roles of ...
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement

2018 Visit to U.S. Africa Command's Command Surgeon

Photo
4/11/2018
Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs Tom McCaffery visits U.S. Africa Command's Command Surgeon and team to discuss the strategic context of global health in advancing shared security objectives with partner nations across the region.  The Department of Defense recognizes that Global Health Engagement activities play a key role to advance U.S. troop operational readiness, build interoperability, and enhance Security Cooperation.
Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs Tom McCaffery visits U.S. Africa Command's Command Surgeon and team to discuss the strategic context of global health in advancing shared security objectives with partner nations across the region. The Department of Defense recognizes that Global Health Engagement activities play a key role to ...
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement

Preventive medicine saving lives

Article
3/28/2018
Navy Lt. Marcus McDonough and Navy Hospital Corpsman 1st Class Adrian Weldon, assigned to Navy Environmental and Preventative Medicine Unit TWO, prepare a BG-Sentinel mosquito trap outside the Franklin D. Roosevelt School during Continuing Promise 2018.(U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Brianna K. Green)
Public health is an essential part of daily life
Recommended Content:
Global Health Engagement

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario