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211123-F-YG657-1111
Tech Sgt. Christopher Weikert (left) and Tech. Sgt. Jonathan Torres, both Crash Damaged Disabled Aircraft Recovery team chiefs assigned to the 39th Maintenance Squadron, observe a crane-lift exercise at Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, Nov. 23, 2021. Airmen from the 39th MXS conducted the exercise in order to ensure response readiness for the Crash Damaged Disabled Aircraft Recovery team. CDDAR is a program that is established for the response and recovery of any downed aircraft quickly and effectively while avoiding any further damage. The CDDAR team provides their capabilities to NATO partners’ aircraft, as well as aircraft for tenant units like the 728th Air Mobility Squadron and 384th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211123-F-YG657-1056
Staff Sgt. Colin Playford (left), a hydraulics craftsman assigned to the 728th Air Mobility Squadron, and SrA Kelvin Pellom, a repair and reclamation journeyman assigned to the 384th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron, attach hoist cables to a Turkish Air Force F-4 Phantom II at Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, Nov. 23, 2021. Airmen from the 39th Maintenance Squadron performed a crane-lift exercise in order to ensure response readiness for the Crash Damaged Disabled Aircraft Recovery team. CDDAR is a program that is established for the response and recovery of any downed aircraft quickly and effectively while avoiding any further damage. The CDDAR team provides their capabilities to NATO partners’ aircraft, as well as aircraft for tenant units like the 728th AMS and 384th EARS. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211123-F-YG657-1214
Airmen assigned to the 39th Maintenance Squadron’s Crash Damaged Disabled Aircraft Recovery team prepare a winch at Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, Nov. 23, 2021. Airmen from the 39th MXS performed a crane-lift exercise in order to ensure response readiness for the Crash Damaged Disabled Aircraft Recovery team. CDDAR is a program that is established for the response and recovery of any downed aircraft in the airfield quickly and effectively while avoiding any further damage. The CDDAR team provides their capabilities to NATO partners’ aircraft as well as aircraft for tenant units like the 728th Air Mobility Squadron and 384th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211123-F-YG657-1297
Senior Airman Ashton Tull (right), a Crash Damaged Disabled Aircraft Recovery journeyman assigned to the 39th Maintenance Squadron unties a guide rope at Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, Nov. 23, 2021. Airmen from the 39th MXS performed a crane-lift exercise in order to ensure response readiness for the Crash Damaged Disabled Aircraft Recovery team. CDDAR is a program that is established for the response and recovery of any downed aircraft in the airfield quickly and effectively while avoiding any further damage. The CDDAR team provides their capabilities to NATO partners’ aircraft as well as aircraft for tenant units like the 728th Air Mobility Squadron and 384th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211123-F-YG657-1254
Senior Airman Ashton Tull, a Crash Damaged Disabled Aircraft Recovery journeyman assigned to the 39th Maintenance Squadron prepares to lift a Turkish Air Force F-4 Phantom II at Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, Nov. 23, 2021. Airmen from the 39th MXS performed a crane-lift exercise in order to ensure response readiness for the Crash Damaged Disabled Aircraft Recovery team. CDDAR is a program that is established for the response and recovery of any downed aircraft in the airfield quickly and effectively while avoiding any further damage. The CDDAR team provides their capabilities to NATO partners’ aircraft as well as aircraft for tenant units like the 728th Air Mobility Squadron and 384th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211027-F-YG657-1737
First Lt. Logan Head, a clinical nurse assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron, treats a virtual patient at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 27, 2021. Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education offers highly realistic, interactive technology that offers real-time feedback between the actual patient and medical provider, which greatly enhances the level of training and readiness that Airmen are receiving. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211027-F-YG657-1651
Tech. Sgt. Leslie Lyles, a medical technician assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron, listens to a simulated patient’s breathing at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 27, 2021. Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education offers highly realistic, interactive technology that offers real-time feedback between the actual patient and medical provider, which greatly enhances the level of training and readiness that Airmen are receiving. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211027-F-YG657-1631
Tech. Sgt. Leslie Lyles, a medical technician assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron, performs a needle decompression on a simulated patient at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 27, 2021. Airmen from the 39th OMRS visited Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education to train in a more realistic environment, with state-of-the-art technology that provides real-time feedback to the medical team. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211027-F-YG657-1609
Zehra Belhan (right), an Acıbadem University nursing instructor, demonstrates how to perform a needle decompression on a simulated patient at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 27, 2021. Airmen from the 39th OMRS visited Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education to train in a more realistic environment, with state-of-the-art technology that provides real-time feedback to the medical team. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211026-F-YG657-1584
Zehra Belhan (left), an Acıbadem University nursing instructor, watches as 1st Lt. Logan Head, a clinical nurse assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron, prepares treatment for a simulated patient at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 26, 2021. Airmen from the 39th OMRS visited Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education to train in a more realistic environment, with state-of-the-art technology that provides real-time feedback to the medical team. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211026-F-YG657-1451
Tech. Sgt. John Varner (left), an independent duty medical technician assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron, and 1st Lt. Logan Head, a clinical nurse assigned to the 39th OMRS, prepare treatment for a simulated patient at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 26, 2021. Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education offers highly realistic, interactive technology that offers real-time feedback between the actual patient and medical provider, which greatly enhances the level of training and readiness that Airmen are receiving. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211026-F-YG657-1411
Tech. Sgt. Leslie Lyles (left), a medical technician assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron, and Tech. Sgt. John Varner, an independent duty medical technician assigned to the 39th OMRS, observe a simulated patient at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 26, 2021. Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education offers highly realistic, interactive technology that offers real-time feedback between the actual patient and medical provider, which greatly enhances the level of training and readiness that Airmen are receiving. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211026-F-YG657-1249
Tech. Sgt. John Varner, an independent duty medical technician assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron, inserts a catheter on a simulated patient at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 26, 2021. Airmen from the 39th OMRS visited Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education to train in a more realistic environment, with state-of-the-art technology that provides real-time feedback to the medical team. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211028-F-YG657-2450
Tech. Sgt. Leslie Lyles, a medical technician assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron, is one of three Incirlik Air Base medical professionals who attended medical training at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 26-28, 2021. As a medical technician, Lyles is able to provide essential care in multiple medical roles, assist primary care providers and care for patients in a wide range of situations. Airmen from the 39th OMRS visited Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education to train in a more realistic environment, with state-of-the-art technology that provides real-time feedback to the medical team, which greatly enhances the level of training and readiness that Airmen are receiving. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211028-F-YG657-2437
First Lt. Logan Head, a clinical nurse assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron, is one of three Incirlik Air Base medical professionals who attended medical training at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 26-28, 2021. As a nurse, Head works in collaboration with physicians and a multidisciplinary team to benefit the military population and their beneficiaries and practice as an independent practitioner with a normal caseload of patients with complex multisystem medical issues, as well as routine health maintenance. Airmen from the 39th OMRS visited Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education to train in a more realistic environment, with state-of-the-art technology that provides real-time feedback to the medical team, which greatly enhances the level of training and readiness that Airmen are receiving. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211028-F-YG657-2403
Tech. Sgt. John Varner, an independent duty medical technician assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron, is one of three Incirlik Air Base medical professionals who attended medical training at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 26-28, 2021. As the only enlisted military health care providers in the Air Force, IDMTs are specially trained medics who provide total medical care at remote locations and deployments in the absence of a physician. Airmen from the 39th OMRS visited Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education to train in a more realistic environment, with state-of-the-art technology that provides real-time feedback to the medical team, which greatly enhances the level of training and readiness that Airmen are receiving. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211028-F-YG657-2210
Airmen assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron perform tactical combat casualty care on a simulated patient at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 28, 2021. Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education offers highly realistic, interactive technology that offers real-time feedback between the actual patient and medical provider, which greatly enhances the level of training and readiness that Airmen are receiving. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to TCCC. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211028-F-YG657-2064
Airmen assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron perform medical treatments on a simulated patient at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 28, 2021. Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education offers highly realistic, interactive technology that offers real-time feedback between the actual patient and medical provider, which greatly enhances the level of training and readiness that Airmen are receiving. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211028-F-YG657-1981
Airmen assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron discuss various medical treatments at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 28, 2021. Airmen from the 39th OMRS visited Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education to train in a more realistic environment, with state-of-the-art technology that provides real-time feedback to the medical team. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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211027-F-YG657-1972
Tech. Sgt. Leslie Lyles, a medical technician assigned to the 39th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron, transfers a simulated patient at Acıbadem University in Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 27, 2021. Airmen from the 39th OMRS visited Acıbadem’s Center of Advanced Simulation and Education to train in a more realistic environment, with state-of-the-art technology that provides real-time feedback to the medical team. The team, which consisted of a clinical nurse and two enlisted medical technicians, performed a spectrum of training scenarios, ranging from clinical patient care to tactical combat casualty care. They also capitalized on the opportunity to use the facility’s virtual reality capabilities to perform basic life-saving skills. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jacob Derry)
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