Army medics train with US Air Force for missions

Army troops wearing camouflage uniforms and helmets walk off the back of a plane on to an airfield. Some of them are carrying stretchers. The photo is taken from behind.Image source, Kate Mullikin/DVIDS
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British Army medics worked with the United States Air Force during the joint training exercise

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British Army medics have undertaken training with the US Air Force to prepare for joint operations.

At the end of July, 16 Medical Regiment based at the Merville Barracks in Colchester trained with the 352nd Special Operations Wing based at RAF Mildenhall, Suffolk, for the Mobile Serpent exercise.

They met at the Stanford training area near Thetford in Norfolk and they practised how medical care could be supported from the air.

Staff Sgt Shaun Newbury, a combat medical technician, said it had been a "positive opportunity to build relations with other military units" in the region.

Army troops train together on a grassed area next to an airfield runway strip. A large army plane can be seen on the runway behind them.Image source, Kate Mullikin/DVIDS
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Provisions were dropped on to the airfield which the medics said improved their mobility and enhanced their treatment capabilities

The medics set up a pre-hospital treatment team on the airfield to simulate the first medical facility a casualty would arrive at after being injured on the battlefield.

Planes were then flown from RAF Mildenhall and dropped supplies by parachute, including refrigerated blood products, a quad bike and a trailer loaded with equipment.

The training culminated with simulated casualties being evacuated from planes while medics continued treatment on-board.

A medical simulation is carried out on-board an army aircraft. Military troops sit around a pretend casualty who lies on a stretched in the middle of the aircraft. Image source, Kate Mullikin/DVIDS
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Treatment simulations were carried out on-board aircraft during the exercise

Staff Sgt Newbury said working together with the US Air Force had "given each of us an insight into the other's capabilities and understand how we would be able to operate together".

"As much as we are close allies in NATO, we are close neighbours, and it has been a positive opportunity to build relations with other military units based in East Anglia," he added.

Another medical simulation is carried out on a larger aircraft. A fake casualty lies on a stretcher in the middle of the aircraft while military personnel sit around them and attend to them.Image source, Kate Mullikin/DVIDS
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The divisions said the exercise had helped strengthen their relationships

Captain of 352nd Special Operations Wing, Hailey Malay, added: "We love working side by side with our UK partners, and training together teaches us how to fight together.

"We build relationships, increase our capabilities, maintain military readiness, and refine our operational integration locally and globally."

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