173rd FW Airmen Provide Medical Care, Get Training

MAUI, Hawaii - A group of medical professionals from the 173rd Fighter Wing in Klamath Falls, Ore., traveled to the Hawaiian Islands for real-world medical training that also served a needy community.

The Air National Guard Innovative Readiness Training program folded the Oregon Airmen into a team with troops from the Navy Reserve, Army, Air Force, and Marine Corps, providing nearly 18,000 procedures worth $1.6 million dollars, said 2nd Lt. Lee Charnow, a 173rd FW medical administrator.

That team served around the island of Maui and Molokai, an adjacent island.  Although Maui is an upscale tourist destination, its high cost-of-living and limited industry relegate a significant number of the population to at or below the poverty level.

Charnow said helping people in this fashion helps prepare a unit for their deployed mission.

“The main reason for the military part of the training, is the integration of the different services-- just but being able to work when you are thrown together with limited supplies and still get the job done is part of the readiness training,” Charnow said.

Charnow said the IRT mission replicates many of the actions they will use in a local exercise he is spearheading for a possible Cascadia event response. “Deploy and set up services in a limited amount of time.”

“I’ve got to do a lot of things in the field like in a deployed location,” said Tech. Sgt. Kendall Nielsen, a bioenvironmental troop. “I did water vulnerability assessments and partnered with public health to do food vulnerability assessments—if I deploy I will use those skills.”

Naturally there was an element of service, providing much needed care to those who couldn’t afford it.

“There was one guy who you could tell probably hadn’t had glasses in maybe a decade,” Nielsen said.  “I handed him his glasses and he was like ‘oh wow!’—it was very, very endearing to watch these people get these services and their appreciation was amazing.”

“It’s an awesome service for our community,” said Mice Kahula, who works for the Maui County Parks Department and served as the civilian logistics manager for the Hana site.

The IRT program began in the early 90s and continues to provide mutual benefit to units from all the service branches as well as needy communities.

Press release provided from the 173rd Fighter Wing, Kingsley Field.

U.S. Air Force Capt. Brian Hopkins, a dentist assigned to Scott Air Force Base, and Master Sgt. Bethany Blevins, a dental technician assigned to the 173rd Medical Group, Oregon Air Guard, conducts a procedure on a patient during Tropic Care Maui Cou…

U.S. Air Force Capt. Brian Hopkins, a dentist assigned to Scott Air Force Base, and Master Sgt. Bethany Blevins, a dental technician assigned to the 173rd Medical Group, Oregon Air Guard, conducts a procedure on a patient during Tropic Care Maui County, Lanai, HI. Aug. 13, 2018. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Justyn M Freeman)

U.S. Air Force Lt. Col Dorthy Hinkley, an optometrist assigned to the 129th Rescue Wing, California Air National Guard, trains a medical team during Tropic Care Maui County 2018, Lanai City, Hi. Aug. 11, 2018. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Justyn M Freeman)

(from left) U.S. Air Force Maj. Thomas Heidenreich, a dentist stationed at Scott Air Force Base, Ill., and Tech. Sgt. Michelle Christie, a dental technician assigned to the 173rd Fighter Wing, perform a tooth extraction at the Mitchell Pauole Community Center in Molokai, Hi., Aug. 15, 2018. Tropic Care Maui County 2018 provides medical troops and support personnel “hands-on” readiness training to prepare for future deployments while providing direct and lasting benefits to the people of Maui, Molokai, and Lanai. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Airman 1st Class Jonathan W. Padish)