Skip to content
  • Home
  • World News
  • Business
  • Aviation
195 news

195News

All the news that's fit to print

  • Home
  • World News
  • Business
  • Aviation
  • Toggle search form
  • Equify Financial, LLC Extends Its Team to Two New Regions for the Small-Ticket Dealer and Vendor Program Business
  • CAROLINE DEBERRY SELECTED FOR THE FEMALE TRAILBLAZER AWARD BY IAOTP Business
  • Secretary Antony J. Blinken And Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi Before Their Meeting World News
  • Comfort Keepers of Edison, NJ Share Tips on Finding the Right Home Caregiver Business
  • Watlow® Accelerates Growth in Malaysia with Expanded Facility & Long-Term Commitment to SE Asia’s Industrial Innovation Aviation
  • Bariatric Hospital Beds and the Crucial Role in Fall Injury and Nurses’ Injury Prevention: The VersaTech Innovation
    Bariatric Hospital Beds and the Crucial Role in Fall Injury and Nurses’ Injury Prevention: The VersaTech Innovation Business
  • Tayloright LLC Rolls Out Antler Bone Men’s Wedding Bands Business
  • Russia’s Intensifying Crackdown on Independent Civil Society World News

36th AES return from deployment

Posted on February 22, 2025 By NewsEditor



KEESLER AIR FORCE BASE, Miss. —  

More than 40 members from the 36th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron here recently completed a six-month deployment supporting multiple combatant command operations, which included Northern, Central, and European Commands.


This deployment highlighted the squadron’s critical role in providing life-saving medical care and transportation to injured personnel across the theater, said Lt. Col. Shannon Corbin, 36th AES interim commander, adding that AES teams include a medical crew director, flight nurse and three aeromedical evacuation technicians.


During their deployment, unit members collaborated with their sister services to enhance operational readiness and ensure seamless patient care at their deployed locations. The squadron’s highly trained aeromedical evacuation teams were tasked with stabilizing and transporting wounded service members from forward-deployed locations to higher-level medical facilities, enabling them to receive advanced care.

“Our primary focus is to provide rapid and reliable medical evacuation services,” said Corbin. “This deployment underscores our commitment to saving lives and supporting the health and well-being of our warfighters.”

Two first-time deployers agreed that it was an eye-opening experience with maintaining a consistent routine and said they would do it again.


Capt. Lauren Poulson, 36th AES flight nurse, who was deployed to Ali Al Salem Air Base, Kuwait, said that throughout the deployment, the deployed members utilized C-130J Super Hercules and C-17 Globemaster aircraft, ensuring that medical personnel could operate efficiently in diverse and challenging environments. The aircraft were outfitted with specialized medical equipment, including litter systems, cardiac monitors, and oxygen delivery systems, transforming them into flying hospitals capable of addressing various medical emergencies.























“We also conducted joint training exercises with the Army to improve readiness and maintain medical evacuation capabilities during downtimes when the crews were not flying missions,” said Poulsen. “During one of those training exercises, called DustOff, we assisted by participating as patients, which allowed the Army soldiers an opportunity to hone the evacuation of patients, by picking up simulated injured patients, transporting and loading into a helicopter for a quick evacuation from outside the base.”


Staff Sgt. Alexis Adeleke, a flight medical technician with the squadron, who was deployed to Ramstein Air Base, Germany, said she flew different mission types: picking up patients from Al Udeid Air Base, Doha, Qatar, and transporting them back to Ramstein AB, Germany and also transferring patients back stateside.


“We had a good variety of missions to choose from and our training helped us prepare to be part of a blended crew that share the same goals, because at the end of the day our job directly impacts the lives of our fellow service members,” said Adeleke.

Always looking to enhance training and readiness, the deployers shared their experiences and provided feedback to unit leadership.


“By gathering information from the returning deployers, we will focus on creating better training plans to maintain a high level of readiness,” said Corbin. “Our members’ contributions during this deployment exemplify their unwavering dedication to saving lives and supporting the mission of the U.S. Air Force.”




Legal Disclaimer:

EIN Presswire provides this news content “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability
for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this
article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.

You just read:

News Provided By

January 31, 2025, 21:55 GMT


EIN Presswire’s priority is author transparency. We do our best to weed out false and misleading content. The content above is
the sole responsibility of the author who makes it available. If you have any complaints, kindly contact the author above.

Originally published at https://www.einpresswire.com/article/782180949/transporting-patients-36th-aes-return-from-deployment

Aviation

Post navigation

Previous Post: Aircraft Cabin Lighting Market 2025 : Competitive Analysis and Industry Forecast
Next Post: Key Drivers, Trends, Growth Opportunities, And Forecast 2025-2034

Related Posts

  • FAA Issues Implementation Plan Outlining Steps to Usher in Advanced Air Mobility  Aviation
  • Eco Bidét—A Clean You Can Carry® is Revolutionizing On-the-Go Freshness for Portable Hygiene Aviation
  • 2nd Biofuels & BioCarbon Asia Aviation
  • DITO and Nomad Partner to Deliver Global Travel eSIMs to Filipino Travelers Aviation
  • Adaptive Robotics Market to Surge from $5.0 Billion in 2020 to $55.1 Billion by 2030, with a CAGR of 26.3% Aviation
  • Small Caliber Ammunition Market Navigating Business with CAGR of 2.8% with Revenue of $14,190.6 million by 2031 Aviation
July 2026
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
« Jun    
last celebrity gossip
Gossip Stone - celebrity life and gossip

Recent Posts

  • Industrial Grade LV Distribution Panel Turnkey Substation Solution: CHSH vs Traditional PanelsJuly 9, 2026
  • How Smartphone Ecosystems are Redefining Global Commerce CollaborationJuly 8, 2026
  • How DENROTARY Is Transforming Modern Orthodontics with Advanced Braces for Teeth SolutionsJuly 8, 2026
  • Solestra Group and Jeh Aerospace Sign Multi-Year Agreement, Inaugurate Dedicated Global Manufacturing Center in IndiaJuly 7, 2026
  • CHSH Engineering Excellence at Enlit AsiaJuly 7, 2026
Brand Values Content
VUGA Enterprises - media network PR & Marketing
  • (Video) Iran’s uprising continues with massive nightly rallies World News
  • Electric Vehicle (EV) Sensor Market Size, Share And Growth Analysis For 2024-2033 World News
  • ‘We’re in This Love Together’ Drops July 1 World News
  • Shelley Clayton Selected for Top Business Owner of the Decade in Aesthetics by IAOTP World News
  • HARRIS & HAYDEN WELCOMES TOP LEGAL TALENT DONOVAN BLOUNT, ESQ. AS NEW ASSOCIATE ATTORNEY World News
  • Breaking Free from Trauma’ by Caitlin Emma Kirschenbaum World News
  • MASS Group Announces New Integration With FEIG Electronics Business
  • Day 358 – Putin is destroying Russian Empire – Latynina.tv – Alexey Arestovych World News
aerospace company
stem cell clinic in kiev
medical spa in miami
Fashion TV free

Copyright © 2023 195 News. All Rights Reserved by Coolaser | Partner of VUGA Enterprises |  Advertising: Get Published

Powered by .