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HomeNewsFort Campbell Soldiers test Army’s new capabilities for Medical Treatment Downrange

Fort Campbell Soldiers test Army’s new capabilities for Medical Treatment Downrange

Written by Maria Yager
Blanchfield Army Community Hospital Public Affairs

Blanchfield Army Hospital - BACH - Fort Campbell KYFort Campbell, KY – Soldiers from the Fort Campbell – based 531st Hospital Center, seven subordinate units and Blanchfield Army Community Hospital participated in a field exercise recently, allowing them to test Army Medicine’s new field hospital platform.

In 2017, the Army’s combat support hospitals began transitioning to a new, more modular 32-bed field hospital that can be expanded incrementally to 148 beds, with a suite of medical and dental services to choose from. Its design gives medical planners more flexibility in sending only the modules and personnel it needs for the mission.

Sgt. Damien Colliver, Spc. Keith Gaston and Capt. Mark Cenon, all from the 41st Medical Detachment on Fort Campbell treat a simulated casualty in the new Intensive Care Unit of 586th Field Hospital during a training exercise on post. The two-week field exercise was the first for the 531st Hospital Center and seven of its direct reporting units since transitioning from the 86th Combat Support Hospital to the Army's new field hospital platform. (U.S. Army photo by Maria Yager)
Sgt. Damien Colliver, Spc. Keith Gaston and Capt. Mark Cenon, all from the 41st Medical Detachment on Fort Campbell treat a simulated casualty in the new Intensive Care Unit of 586th Field Hospital during a training exercise on post. The two-week field exercise was the first for the 531st Hospital Center and seven of its direct reporting units since transitioning from the 86th Combat Support Hospital to the Army’s new field hospital platform. (U.S. Army photo by Maria Yager)

To date, three of the Army’s combat support hospitals have made the transition including the Fort Campbell-based 531st Hospital Center, formally known as the 86th CSH.

“The 531st is a newly designated hospital center with the mission to serve as the command element for what used to be the headquarters of a combat support hospital,” said Col. Brandon Pretlow, 531st commander.

A field hospital provides line commanders Role III (hospital level) medical support in a theater of operations to help conserve the fighting force. The field hospital is subordinate to the hospital center and provides services ranging from routine sick call and primary care to emergency medical treatment and surgical services. Solders from the newly established 586th Field Hospital fall under the 531st to support the medical mission.

“This is the first opportunity for the 586th Field Hospital to test its manning and mission capability with its new equipment and its new configuration and this is the first time for the 531st Hospital Center command and staff to come out and train on mission command and battle drills.”

Soldiers from the 586th Field Hospital treat a simulated casualty in their new field hospital during a field exercise Oct. 16. The training was the first time the unit was able to break out its new 148-bed field hospital platform since transitioning from the 86th Combat Support Hospital to the Army's new modular field hospital platform. To date the Army has transitioned three of 10 combat support hospital's to the new design. (U.S. Army photo by Maria Yager)
Soldiers from the 586th Field Hospital treat a simulated casualty in their new field hospital during a field exercise Oct. 16. The training was the first time the unit was able to break out its new 148-bed field hospital platform since transitioning from the 86th Combat Support Hospital to the Army’s new modular field hospital platform. To date the Army has transitioned three of 10 combat support hospital’s to the new design. (U.S. Army photo by Maria Yager)

The field exercise on Fort Campbell began with an advance detachment learning to set-up the new modular system made up of tents and International Standards of Organization shipping containers. Once established Soldiers participated in ten days of operational training that included integration with the 101st Airborne Division’s 3rd Brigade Combat Team.

“We’ve had some casualty play where we’re doing medical evacuation, or casualty evacuation from the Role I (battalion aid station) within 3rd Brigade Combat Team all the way back to the field hospital for Role III treatment which can prepare a patient for further evacuation or extended care here at the 586th Field Hospital,” said Pretlow.

The 772nd Forward Surgical Team, unit assigned to the 531st was embedded with 3rd Brigade Combat Team’s 626th Brigade Support Battalion, to provide emergency damage control surgery at the Role II (division level) station. This collaboration of the units allows brigade medical assets to improve their treatment capability of stabilizing casualties and preparing them for evacuation to a medical facility capable of providing the level of care required.

The realistic training simulated conditions the units could experience in a deployed environment and was a new experience for some of the Soldiers.

“I definitely learned more from the exercise. We learned different techniques that you have to use with the portable x-ray. It’s harder to move around, but the [586th Soldiers] made it look so easy,” said Pfc. Sharene Carey, a student completing her six-month clinical rotation at Blanchfield’s Radiology Specialist Phase 2 training site.

Blanchfield’s radiology students were able to gain experience training in their career field at the 586th’s radiology module, getting exposure to equipment and conditions they may operate under in a deployed environment.

Aside from the battle drills, the exercise involved breaking-out all the new unit’s equipment and modules and presented new learning opportunities as Soldiers assembled their redesigned hospital for the first time.

“For this field exercise what we wanted to do was set up the entire 148 beds to find out exactly what it is we can do and where our short comings are. That’s really what we wanted to get at here and to figure out what we needed to improve upon and what we needed to go back to MEDCOM and to the Army and to ask them to field us so that we can provide the best care to our warfighters,” said Master Sgt. Patrick Walters, 586th senior enlisted advisor.

The new field hospital and stand-alone command center feature new, improved materials and modern equipment that better enables patient care and battlefield flexibility. Part of the training required the break-down, relocation and reassembly of a one of the 531st’s subordinate units to a different area of the theater of operation.

“It’s a learning opportunity. We’re taking it in a very positive aspect and getting a lot of positive feedback from Soldiers and just identifying new ways of doing things. It is not the old CSH concept. It is something new and we have a lot of work to do to get after it, making sure we are trained in all of our abilities of what we’re doing. So far the exercise has been excellent. We need to do more, but it will come in time,” said Pretlow.

As the command element, the 531st can deploy with two field hospitals and specialty units and augmentees. This training also included Soldiers from the 72nd Veterinary Detachment, 501st Area Support Medical Company, 179th Medical Detachment, 41st Medical Detachment, 212th Combat Stress Control, and 61st Preventive Medicine Detachment.

Assigned to the 44th Medical Brigade, Fort Bragg, North Carolina, the 531st Hospital Center and subordinate units operate from Fort Campbell to support the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), unified land operations and defense support of civil authorities.

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