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When no one hears "Corpsman up!" |

MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. (Oct. 3, 2008) - Lance Cpl.
Jessie Delgado, a radio operatior with Communications Company,
Combat Logistics Regiment 27, 2nd Marine Logistics Group,
overlooks Sgt. Manuel Ahumada, the assistant environmental
compliance coordinator for 2nd MLG, to determine what the most
life-threatening emergency is during an exercise in the Combat
Life Saver Course Oct. 3. The Marines completed the nearly
week-long training today and will now return to their units
with the basic knowledge needed to treat the most common of
combat injuries. |
By Cpl.
Aaron Rooks , 2nd Marine Logistics Group
MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. (Oct. 3, 2008) - Every
Marine is familiar with the phrase "Corpsman up," which is not
unusual being that the phrase has been screamed by thousands
of Marines, from a multitude of generations after generations,
in wars waged through trenches, jungles, cities, deserts and
mountains.
But what should Marines of today do if a comrade goes down and
the Corpsman gets injured himself, or if there is simply not a
Corpsman around to hear the phrase "Corpsman up?" How would
the motor transport driver or the food service specialist
react when all they know is the basics of being a rifleman and
the fundamentals of their jobs?
From Sept. 30-Oct. 3, the Combat Life Saver Course taught a
group of Marines from the 2nd Marine Logistics Group the
answers to those potential questions that they could face on
today's battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan.
"An individual corpsman can only effectively treat one to
three Marines. Any more than that, we will be stretched thin,
and the casualty's chance of survival will be decreased," said
Petty Officer 3rd Class Gabriel Florez, a hospital Corpsman
with 2nd Medical Battalion, Combat Logistics Regiment 25, 2nd
MLG. "Because of this, Marines need to know the basic
life-saving procedures that have been proven to save lives in
a combat environment."
The Phoenix native says the course does just that; it's
designed to teach Marines what they need to know in order to
save the life of a comrade when their "life-lines" are
injured, or indisposed treating other servicemembers? In less
than a one week, the Marines learn everything from treating
for hemorrhages, burns, shock, broken bones and breathing
obstructions, to performing evacuation procedures,
administering intravenous therapy and providing care while
under fire.
Florez has served as lead instructor for the course since
February 2008. In this time, he has conducted more than 1,664
hours of training, he and has seen hundreds of Marines come
through the halls of 2nd Medical to learn all of the basic
knowledge involved in emergency medical care
"We've trained more than 500 deploying Marines since February
of this year, and it's been a good first step for those
Marines," Florez said. "They've learned a good, in-depth
familiarization with the most common battlefield injuries that
are killing people such as collapsed lungs, arterial bleeding,
obstructed airways,"
When deployed to Iraq in 2005, where he served as a casualty
evacuation (CASEVAC) corpsman, Florez saw the reasons himself
first-hand as to why deploying Marines should know how to
perform emergency medical procedures. Throughout his daily
tours of duty, he would play the role of an in-flight
corpsman, evacuating injured Marines, Sailors, civilians and
even enemy combatants from the frontlines of battle by
helicopter.
One casualty evacuation he participated in was not as
successful as the usual though. This operation involved the
lives of six soldiers who were being transported to Camp
Taqaddum, Iraq. There were three in the front of the aircraft,
three in the rear, but Florez was forced to only focus on one.
"I needed the aerial observer to provide rescue breathing for
one patient while I checked on the others," Florez remembers.
"Because he didn't know how to properly provide emergency
breathing, it decreased my ability to treat the other
individuals. If he knew and was trained in how to provide
common medical procedures like that, I could have spent more
time caring for the other patients."
Lexington, S.C., native, Petty Officer 2nd Class Pietro
Christofoli, who is also a hospital corpsman with 2nd Medical,
agrees with Florez's views on the training Marines need to
tend to their own when they have no other choice. He said that
when comparing year one of the Iraq War to the fourth and
fifth year, events show that each subsequent year the enemy
found new ways to attack U.S. forces, which proves that as the
casualties increase, the need for Marines who are trained as
emergency medics has to increase as well.
Christofoli feels that "everybody needs the training, and as
more people are trained with treating others, more lives will
be saved." He said that if he were to ever be injured on the
battlefield, he would hope that a Marine out there with him
would have the knowledge necessary to save his life.
So where to begin? Both instructors agree that the students
must first understand the importance of gaining the medical
knowledge before they can adequately retain and understand the
concepts and procedures. This foundation, they said, comes in
the first day of the course. Florez said that a lot of the
Marines "don't understand why they are in the course," many of
whom say something to the effect of "I'm a driver or I'm a
mechanic, I'm not a corpsman."
Florez added that the instructors have to try and get the
students to realize the importance of the course, otherwise
they simply won't have their attention. To do this, he said
they just ask them a question that points out the obvious. He
would ask, "How many corpsman are in your company? So what
would you do if the one corpsman with you was injured or
killed?" He said from this point on, they have their
attention.
"With this training, you can save a life," said Sgt. Manuel
Ahumada, the assistant environmental compliance coordinator
for 2nd MLG, who is originally from Tuscan, Ariz., and is
currently taking part in the course. "It's those first
stabilizing steps that make a difference. The Marines are
going to be the first responders on scene when something goes
wrong, the corpsman might not even find out what's happening
for several minutes."
Christofoli said the next step after explaining why the
Marines need this knowledge, is to let them practice. He
explained that they never expect them to be proficient
corpsman right off the bat, but that after they get some
practice time in, roughly 16 hours worth, it gets easier for
them.
"I feel a lot more confident now," said Pittsburgh native
Lance Cpl. Candace Aspeotes, a field radio operator with
Communications Company, Combat Logistics Regiment 27, 2nd MLG,
who has only been in the Marine Corps for a little more than
one year, and has never experienced deployed life. "My fellow
Marines needed this class because we are out there with the
other Marines, and we can often become big targets. Before
this course, I didn't have the slightest clue about this
stuff. Now I get it."
Out of this week's class of 12, seven were from Communications
Company, all of whom volunteered to come. This shows a true
progress for the course, and proves that more Marines
understand the value and true effects of the course.
"More Marines should continue to look into this training,"
Ahumada said. "You just never know when your corpsman could go
down." |
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