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Nurse saves life

Training JBLM soldiers provided pays off for young boy

Nursing student Abbie Hinneifa, after attending CPR training taught by the 62nd Medical Task Force, saved the life of a 2-year-old boy. Photo credit: Col. Christensen Hsu

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Less than two weeks after completing an eight-hour basic lifesaving course, third-year nursing student Abbie Hinneifa used cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) to save the life of a young boy.

Hinneifa attended the course, taught by Army nurses from Joint Base Lewis-McChord 62nd Medical Task Force, and received refresher training in CPR. With the training still fresh in her mind, Hinneifa jumped to action when an emergency occurred in her village.

While caring for her own child, she heard the frantic screams of a villager nearby who was cradling an unconscious young boy in his arms. She approached the man and noticed that the child was blue from a lack of oxygen in the blood. The boy had been swimming at the beach outside of his village and drowned.

Hinneifa immediately began performing CPR. The boy was revived after two cycles of CPR. He regained some consciousness, had a steady pulse, and was spontaneously breathing on his own. He was transported to the Emergency Room at Tungaru Hospital. The boy is expected to fully recover.

"Abbie saved this young boy's life," said Col. Christensen Hsu. "Our medical task force is trained to save the lives of others but it will be the local doctors, nurses, and first responders of Kiribati who will save lives on the island."

The 62nd Medical Task Force, supporting Pacific Partnership 15, spent 15 days in Kiribati conducting healthcare engagements with host nation providers.

The mission was to enhance the country's medical capabilities in order to build capacity to respond to all hazards, including disease outbreaks and natural disasters.

Healthcare providers conducted educational symposiums, life-saving skills courses, and healthcare lectures during their visit to the island. Additionally, doctors, nurses, dentists, and technicians worked alongside the local providers in the clinics to share diagnostic skills and exchange ideas.

"This is a different approach from the humanitarian missions of the past in which the emphasis was the delivery of direct healthcare services to the underserved population of a developing country," said Hsu. "The local doctors, nurses, and first responders, like the police and ambulance drivers who were trained by the 62nd Medical Task Force, now have the responsibility to execute these life-saving skills. The measure of effectiveness for the training provided can only be revealed with time, but it didn't take months to see a result."

Task Force Forager is embarked aboard the Military Sealift Command joint high speed vessel USNS Millinocket (JHSV 3) and is led by an expeditionary command element from the Navy's 30th Naval Construction Regiment (30 NCR) from Port Hueneme, California. Millinocket is currently serving as the secondary platform for Pacific Partnership 2015. The primary platform for the mission is the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy (T-AH 19).

Now in its 10th iteration, Pacific Partnership is the largest annual multilateral humanitarian assistance and disaster relief preparedness mission conducted in the Indo-Asia-Pacific Region. While training for crisis conditions, Pacific Partnership missions have provided medical care to approximately 270,000 patients and veterinary services to more than 38,000 animals. Additionally, the mission has provided critical infrastructure developments to host nations through the completion of more than 180 engineering projects.

Additional information on the Pacific Partnership mission is available on the U.S. Pacific fleet Pacific Partnership website at www.cpf.navy.mil/pacific-partnership/2015/.

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