Three Navy biomeds share their experiences serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom.
In April 2003, three Navy BMETs sat shotgun in 5-ton flatbed trucks
as part of a convoy of fuel and water trucks and ambulances headed from Kuwait to
establish Fleet Hospital 3 (FH-3), approximately 25 miles southwest of An Nasiriyah, Iraq.
What should have been a 4-hour trip took 14 due to a sandstorm that forced the crew to
halt for hours and got them headed in the wrong direction several times.
Hospital Corpsman First Class (HM1) Eric Ralston, HM1 Ken Gray, and Hospital Corpsman
Second Class Ron Welch from Naval Hospital Pensacola (NHP) in Pensacola, Fla, were on
their way to a 7-week tour of duty with FH-3 the first-ever Navy medical command to set up
an expeditionary medical facility in a war zone during Operation Iraqi Freedom. The $12
million hospital was constructed by a team of approximately 300 medical service support
and construction battalion personnel from around the United States.
BioMed Trio: They are (from left) Petty Officers Ralston,
Gray, and Welch
Ralston, who has been in the Navy for 8 years and a BMET for 18 months, says he had no
idea that the job of BMET existed when he joined the Navy. It was only after being in the
Navy for about 4 years that he heard about it from a friend when he was stationed with the
Marines at Camp LeJeune in North Carolina. After being accepted at the Department of
Defense BMET school at Sheppard Air Force Base in Wichita Falls, Tex, he took basic and
advanced training back-to-back. I love this job," he says, Its the
best job Ive ever had."
Gray has been in the Navy for 19 years and a biomed tech for 16 years. He originally
joined the Navy to be an electronics technician, but when he joined, the training was not
available. He became a hospital corpsman and trained as a biomed at Fitzsimmons US Army
Garrison near Aurora, Colo, which no longer has such a program. I love my job,"
he says. It was a good decision."
Motto du jour for biomedical repair shop at FH-3.
Welch has been in the Navy for 20 years. He is retired from the military but hopes to
find a biomed position in the civilian sector. He, too, had no idea that BMET school
existed when he joined the Navy, but, after having been in for 6 or 7 years, he met
several biomeds and was very impressed. He decided to pursue biomedical equipment service
and support training at Fitzsimmons and has been a biomed for 8 years.
Setting Up Housekeeping
The fleet hospital was set up in what used to be an Iraqi air base in the
middle of nowhere," says Ralston. It was all sand everywhere. We started out
with big green army tents from about the Korean War age and had to set up 26 of them. We
also had TEMPER (tent extendable modular personnel) tents that had about five wings.
Additionally, we had expandable shelters about half the size of railroad cars. They folded
out like Winnebagos and were connected to the tents by vestibules. Our shop was set up in
one of these. A few of the spaces had air conditioning, and we were responsible for
maintaining the units. It wasnt really our job, but we were the only people there
who had had any training."
HM2 Welch sketch. Corpsman washes down gurney used to
transport patients at FH-3 during Operation Iraqi Freedom.
The hospital had initially been set up in a 116-bed configuration, but the crew managed
to squeeze in a few more and ended up with 132. Although three shelters had been
designated as operating rooms, only two were actually used for that purpose. The third had
been redesigned prior to the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom and was used as a clean room
with sterilizers, which needed an air conditioned environment.
The first 3 days were devoted to getting the oxygen generators up and
running," Ralston says. I say generators because the first one broke within 30
minutes. The generators weighed about 6,000 pounds each and were packed in crates called
CONEX boxes, so it was not like just pulling a wagon handle. We had to find a 5,000 lb
capacity forklift and big chains to pull them out."
The oxygen generator was our primary responsibility," says Gray. It
was very large: 10 feet tall and 12 feet wide. It sucked in ambient air and put out 93% to
98% medical-grade oxygen. We had to keep the hospital supplied with oxygen, so we had to
repair the generator and nurse it along. It was our baby. We had three of these machines
and had to use all three to keep one running because of the sand and dirt
everywhere.
Other equipment for which the BMETs were responsible included four portable x-ray
units, ECG monitors, defibrillators, critical care monitors (Propaq), all of the OR
equipment, anesthesia equipment, and field anesthesia equipment. We had a portable
darkroom," says Ralston. Basically it was a big black piece of plastic Velcroed
to the wall. We literally had to crawl under the plastic to get into the darkroom. It was
pretty warm in there. We also had an x-ray room that we never set up because of pollution
with the sand."
HM1 Ken Gray rehabilitates a laptop.
Once the corpsmen got the oxygen machine up and running and were able to provide oxygen
to the hospital, they spent the next 2 weeks getting the other equipment in working order.
Ralston reports that he spent 24 hours taking apart three x-ray machines to make two.
During this time," he says, Welch was babysitting the oxygen generator
and Gray was spending time between sterilizers and anesthesia machines and dealing with
every other little problem we had. Sometimes we had 48-hour days, but 16 [-hour days] were
normal.
Time on Their Hands
Things slowed down after that, and the corpsmen had some leisure time. Welch
spent much of his time drawing. [The sketches] seem to be a popular item here,
he says. The National Museum of Navy Aviation is going to put them in an archive for
me, and they are going to blow some of them up and use them for the Navy Ball."
Ralston says this was when they moved to their side business of removing sand from the
CD players, tape players, computers, and equipment of other staff at FH-3.
Of course, it was free of charge," he says. We did anything we could
do to help the morale of the people we were [serving] with. We made a lot of friends that
way.
The sand destroyed everything. This was not normal sand you would find at a beach
here in the States. It had the texture of sifted flour and was in everything. Five minutes
after taking a shower, wed be covered. It was like walking through snowdrifts.
Apparently at one time the area was a floodplain that had been dammed off by a previous
regime. This made for some very fine, silty sand.
HM2 Ron Welch hefts an empty oxygen cylinder.
Rising to the Challenge
When asked about some of the challenges the three BMETs encountered, Welch tells
24x7, Parts were nonexistent. We got there and we discovered we had no parts
whatsoever to fix the equipment. To repair equipment, we cannibalized a lot. Some pieces
of equipment that came to us in brand-new boxes were probably 20 years old and broken. We
cannibalized them for every part we could get our hands on. We stole fuses and parts from
all kinds of equipmentsometimes new equipment. We did anything to keep [the
equipment] up and running because we were receiving patients within 3 to 4 days of our
arrival. We were fighting a never-ending battle, especially at the beginning. It was
horrendous. We had no supplies to start with and had no supply line because we were too
far forward."
The heat was also a problem. The hottest temperature was 145 degrees Fahrenheit.
That day we were cooking on top of our isoshelter," Gray says.
Despite the heat, at the beginning of their tour the corpsmen had to wear full MOP gear
as protection against chemical, radiological, and/or biological agents. It was
almost like wearing a coat and sweatpants over our uniforms, plus a gas mask and flack
jacket. We stayed as close to the air conditioned med repair shop as we could," Gray
says.
HM2 Welch sketch. Injured 4-year-old Iraqi girl being
attended to by Navy nurses of FH-3.
Helping the Locals
More than 1,100 patients passed through the hospital between April and June.
Surgeons performed more than 680 surgeries, sometimes multiple surgeries on the same
patients. During the first few weeks, the patients were primarily US and allied troops and
EPOWs. After some weeks, that traffic dropped off, and the crew was surprised at how many
Iraqiswomen, children, familiescame to be treated. The locals became the
majority of patients.
When asked if they provided training for locals, Ralston says no: I made one trip
from the hospital to a city called Ad Diwaniyah. There was a civilian hospital there that
had been damaged during the fighting, and they were trying to get set up so they could
begin receiving patients. I coordinated the repair of a C-arm and an x-ray unit[to get the
hospital operational].
We also supplied the hospital with medications and consumable supplies,"
Gray says. We provided IVs, surgical sets, bandages, cleaning items, garbage bags.
The motivation was that the sooner we got them up and running, the sooner we could go
home. The hospital at Ad Diwaniyah was going to take on the civilians that we had after we
left. We spent the last two weeks of our tour working that stuff up along with our supply
people." All of FH-3s other excess supplies and consumables were taken back
with the command to Kuwait where it was inventoried and $1 million dollars worth of
supplies and consumables were taken to a central location to be used by civilian hospitals
in the overall Iraqi relief effort.
HM1 Eric Ralston in full regalia
Take-Home Lessons
Welch, Gray, and Ralston unanimously agree that their tour in Iraq taught them
important things about themselves.
Says Welch, I believe I can do anything with nothing in no time at all. Before I
went [to Iraq], I would complain, Ive got to wait a week to get these
supplies? Dang it! I cant get hold of the manufacturer. Now its,
Hah! I dont need that. I can fix this thing with chewing gum and baling
wire."
Gray echoes Welchs thoughts, adding, There is no challenge too great. This
is the biggest thing Ive ever done in my life. The reaction I get from people when I
tell them I was there makes me so proud. I am just glad to have served my country with
[Welch and Ralston].
Ralston, too, says one can become an expert on anything if forced to deal with it 24
hours a day. He laughingly says, Car parts can fix medical equipment, contrary to
the manufacturer. You just have to steal the right fuses!"
I couldnt have done it without them," Welch concludes. I
wouldnt have chosen any other people to be there with. Petty Officer Ralston and
Petty Officer Gray are the best."
Indeed.
24x7 thanks Rod Duren, public affairs officer, Naval Hospital Pensacola, for
arranging our conversation with Petty Officers Gray, Ralston, and Welch. It was a
privilege.