PIEDRA MESA, Costa Rica (AFPN) –
More than 600 patients were seen during a two-day medical readiness training exercise Dec. 18 and 19 in Costa Rica by Joint Task Force-Bravo American servicemembers from Soto Cano, Honduras.
The team, made up of 28 Airmen and Soldiers spent two days in the village of Piedra Mesa operating a makeshift clinic for the indigenous people in the area.
Five critical patients required air evacuation to the city of Limon, a 15-minute flight that would have taken days to hike through the mountainous terrain. Members of the 1st Battallion-228th Aviation Regiment transported a girl diagnosed with cerebral palsy and pneumonia, which was the most critical case seen by the team.
"They brought this little girl here, immediately diagnosed her with a serious illness, potentially fatal, and a (Army UH-60) Black Hawk was able to airlift her to Limon," said Mark Langdale, the U.S. ambassador to Costa Rica, who visited Piedra Mesa during the first day of the exercise. "So just by being here today, we may have saved that girl's life."
The majority of patients seen by the team had upper-respiratory infections, dermatological issues, diarrhea and pneumonia, said Dr. Miguel Coello, a Honduran Medical Liaison Officer with JTF-Bravo's medical element. A small group had parasitic infections that were treated by the Costa Rican ministry of health members present at the site.
"We were invited here by the Costa Rican ministry of health to help the isolated people of this country," said Master Sgt. Troy Himes, the NCO in charge of medical operations. "It's a phenomenal feeling to be able to provide true humanitarian assistance to people who really need it."
The various divisions of the clinic included preventative medicine, nurse triage, a pharmacy and health-care providers.
Reports indicated several families had hiked for more than a week to reach the medical readiness training exercise site despite heavy rainfall and flooding in the area, said Sergeant Himes, who is deployed from Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio.
The mission has been several years in the making, but worth the effort, Ambassador Langdale said. The reaction has been 100 percent positive, although the Costa Ricans are not used to seeing a military presence in their country since they abolished their own in 1948. The country has been "unplugged" to what the U.S. has been doing in the Southern Command area of responsibility, which includes Central America.
"We're kind of moving forward in re-establishing these relationships," he said. "It will take time, but I feel good about it. I feel optimistic."
The benefits of the mission were immediately visible to those at the site, and the efforts extended beyond Piedra Mesa to other parts of the country, Ambassador Langdale said.
The work being done at the site had a profound impact on those involved, like Tech. Sgt. Jennifer Parker. Sergeant Parker said the medical readiness training exercise, which was her first during her four-month deployment to Honduras from Langley AFB, Va., was an immensely gratifying, but surreal experience.
"This is the kind of place I've only seen in magazines and on television," she said. "To be standing here, actually talking to these people and reaching out to them is an incredible feeling. This is the culmination of everything we prepare for at Soto Cano."
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