Thirty-eight members of the 86th Medical Group will join medical personnel from Belgium, Holland and Great Britain as part of an international medical exercise, the Joint Medical Module, scheduled in the Netherlands March 21 through April 1.
In preparation for the exercise, the Ramstein participants set up an Expeditionary Medical Support tent near the logistics warehouse Thursday on Ramstein.
“One (basic EMEDS setup) can take care of 2,000 people for 30 days before it has to be resupplied,” said Maj. Ray Vincent, 86th MDG Medical Readiness Flight commander. “It is a stepping stone-type capability that we can send anywhere in the world in 18 hours or less.”
Depending on the crisis, modules can be added allowing the EMEDS to meet more specific needs.
“The basic EMEDS package provides primary care, nursing care, laboratory services, dental care, X-ray and a surgical capability,” Major Vincent said. “Then you can also add modules for more specialized needs such as pediatrics or gynecology.”
A mobile cadre specializing in the EMEDS course from Brooks Air Force Base, Texas, will also be joining the 86th MDG personnel during the JMM.
“What this does, instead us sending one or two people TDY at a time, we can train 38 of our people and 14 from Spangdahlem all at one time,” Major Vincent said. “This prevents a decreased capability in the clinic and ends up saving us about $175,000 in TDY costs.”
The JMM is a mass-casualty training exercise designed to build the interoperability of allied forces and increase the operational capabilities of responding forces in emergency situations.
“This will bring closer partnership and sharing of medical information on how we do things together for future deployments or contingencies,” Major Vincent said.
An added benefit of this exercise is it satisfies mandatory Air Force training requirements.
“Once the participants complete this training they’ll be EMEDS qualified,” Major Vincent said.
In recent years, Ramstein medical personnel practiced their combined expeditionary skills by participating in the annual medical training exercise in Central and Eastern Europe.
However, though there is one more MEDCEUR exercise scheduled in June, there are currently none scheduled for the following years, so the JMM is expected to replace MEDCEUR for the immediate future, Major Vincent said.
The JMM consists of two parts.
“The first few days will be didactics, where the participants will teach each other,” Major Vincent said. “Then there will be a cultural day followed by a three-day live exercise.”
The live exercise will consist of scenarios such as a hostile attack on the base, a vehicle accident, a fire, a natural disaster and a gas attack, providing the participants with a wide variety of mock injuries to diagnose and treat.
Though the JMM has fewer participants than the MEDCEUR exercises, Major Vincent said he believes the benefits are the same.
The opportunity to practice with medical personnel from other nations translates well into many of the current ongoing combined operations, according to the major. Being familiar with each other’s procedures can mean the difference between life and death.