Arctic paratroopers take training in tropics

  • Published
  • By Army Capt. John Lunieski
  • 8th Forward Surgical Team (Airborne)
The 8th Forward Surgical Team (Airborne) is preparing to deploy in the next few months to support troops wounded in combat.

A recent training mission in the lower 48 is the latest test of the unit's readiness.
The 8th FST has come full circle, in less than two years.

About 18 months ago, in the warmth of sunlit tropical Hawaii, an 18th Medical Command assembly stood in tight formation to welcome home 20 heroes from their deployment to Afghanistan.

Their work done, the 8th Forward Surgical Team inactivated.

Under the lush palm trees of Fort Shafter, the unit cased its maroon guidon, smartly saluted its commander and meandered off the parade field.

Six months later, the approaching Alaska winter a sharp contrast to the Hawaiian spring, a lone supply officer unceremoniously handed off the same cased guidon, re-activating the now 8th Forward Surgical Team (Airborne) in a new home.

Despite few supplies, no personnel and limited experience the unit grew, sought training and embraced its new Arctic-Airborne identity.

Nearly a year later the unit again found itself in the shade of tropical palm trees, this time proving its mettle as a combat ready Army Forward Surgical Team.

After two weeks at the Army Trauma Training Center in Miami, Florida and treating 62 patients at one of the nation's busiest Trauma Centers, the Soldiers of the 8th FST are ready to deploy, and fight to save the lives of American service members wounded in war.

Describing the ATTC, the team's commander, Army Maj. Nathan Marsh said, " As a young team, we have not yet had the opportunity to work together treating acute trauma patients. Success in our deployed mission, fighting to save life and limb, is impossible without a team focused approach to trauma. At ATTC we have had an outstanding opportunity to rehearse that care. Our experiences there further strengthened our team with confidence that we can make a vital difference for critically injured fellow Soldiers."
In collaboration with the University of Miami's Ryder Trauma Center, the ATTC opened as the official pre-deployment training center for the Army's Forward Surgical Teams a month after the September 11, terrorist attacks.

A decade later nearly 100 surgical teams have rotated through the intensive two-week program, which includes team-building exercises, a mass casualty incident response, and clinical rotations in the hospital's Trauma Resuscitation Unit and surgical areas.
The ATTC course offered tailored classes to all specialties and skill levels.

Everyone in the unit received a core of didactic training.

This included instruction in casualty triage, human surgical anatomy, and emergency trauma skills.

The ATTC staff reinforced the classroom lessons with multiple simulator based trauma scenarios and supervised patient care.

The training concluded after the 8th FST assumed control of the Ryder Trauma Center for a continuous 48-hour period evaluating and treating every trauma patient that entered the doors over the Halloween weekend.

Everyone from fresh-faced privates to board-certified surgeons gained invaluable experience from the training.

The team's junior member, Pvt. Triolo described the ATTC as, "The best training I have received from the Army. It gave me an excellent opportunity to work with my new team and see how they do things."

The camaraderie of the unit proved to be its ultimate key to success.

From a collection of different personalities, varied specialties, and newly attached team members, a solid motivated core emerged with everyone acting in concert to save the lives of their patients.

None of the members of the 8th FST expect an easy deployment.

With the skills they honed in Miami and with new insight regarding their team's dynamics and capabilities the 8th FST knows it can make a difference to all the heroes who find themselves injured in the war zone, team members said after the training.