Medics provide care in Honduran villages

  • Published
  • By Tech. Sgt. Sonny Cohrs
  • Joint Task Force-Bravo Public Affairs
Airmen and Soldiers from the Joint Task Force-Bravo Medical Element provided care for residents of seven Honduran villages Oct. 19 and 20, with aid ranging from preventative medicine to dental procedures.

Overall, this medical readiness training mission, or MEDRETE, educated 785 Hondurans on preventive medicine issues such as hand washing, food preparation and personal hygiene. 

Of those 785, doctors examined 352 patients and the dentist treated 139 patients. This MEDRETE provided pharmacy supplies, preventive medicine education and general medical and dental care to the Hondurans. The military team also stressed the importance of working together with the Honduran ministry of health, who provided gynecology and veterinary services during the mission.

The group traveled by military convoy to the Cuesta de la Virgen school, testing their convoy operations in contrast to previous MEDRETEs involving helicopter airlift.

"It usually takes about 30 minutes to get a helicopter and crew spun up, but we were able to drive to this mission in about 20 minutes," said Maj. Larry Taylor, a pharmacist with JTF-B and the officer in charge for this mission who is deployed to Soto Cano Air Base, Honduras. 

This was a very rewarding experience, Major Tayor said. "It's nice to be doing the humanitarian mission -- helping the needy people who appreciate the medical services."

Honduran Dr. Wilmer Amador, who works as a liaison for the Medical Element, said he is very grateful to be in a unique position to help his countrymen.

"This is a medical training mission," he said. "That's good, the benefit is on a personal level and you can actually see the 'real' Honduras. Honduras is the third poorest country in this continent, and the average person lives on about $763 per person, per year."

Dr. Amador, who has been involved with planning MEDRETEs since the early 1990s, said at first he wasn't sure if these missions were making a difference until he met a lady who had walked more than three hours just to get lotion for her baby's skin rash.

"For those types of patients, we really are making a difference," he said. "It's the appeal that MEDRETEs have -- they really have a 'bang for the buck,' like they say in English."

The most "bang," according to the doctor, is from the preventive medicine portion of the briefing. The "appeal" brings out more patients because it is the Americans providing the majority of the care.

"We try to focus on the things that are affecting our people most, which is why we set up a preventive medicine station first," he said.

For the military members within Medical Element, this mission forced them to improvise with what they had and think outside of the box while providing care. 

"This gives us rural medical experience, (since) we don't have the luxury of labs and X-rays," said Capt. Michelle Sredinski, a nurse deployed to Honduras from the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo. "I think it's great (because) we're able to provide a lot of the medical care that's necessary for the people in these remote areas, and we get to see how the people live and what they go through."

U.S. servicemembers assigned to Joint Task Force-Bravo have been conducting medical readiness training exercises in Honduras since October 1994. 

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