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Air Force medics need to be ready at a moment’s notice.
Air Force medics with the 88th Medical Group showcased their readiness and response skills during the Ready Eagle II exercise at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, simulating mass casualty scenarios to enhance team coordination and patient care. (Contributed Photo)
Air Force medics need to be ready at a moment’s notice.
Air Force medics with the 88th Medical Group showcased their readiness and response skills during the Ready Eagle II exercise at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, simulating mass casualty scenarios to enhance team coordination and patient care. (Contributed Photo)
Air Force medics need to be ready at a moment’s notice.
Air Force medics with the 88th Medical Group showcased their readiness and response skills during the Ready Eagle II exercise at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, simulating mass casualty scenarios to enhance team coordination and patient care. (Contributed Photo)
Air Force medics need to be ready at a moment’s notice.
Air Force medics with the 88th Medical Group showcased their readiness and response skills during the Ready Eagle II exercise at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, simulating mass casualty scenarios to enhance team coordination and patient care. (Contributed Photo)
Air Force medics need to be ready at a moment’s notice.
Air Force medics with the 88th Medical Group showcased their readiness and response skills during the Ready Eagle II exercise at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, simulating mass casualty scenarios to enhance team coordination and patient care. (Contributed Photo)
Air Force medics need to be ready at a moment’s notice.
Air Force medics with the 88th Medical Group showcased their readiness and response skills during the Ready Eagle II exercise at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, simulating mass casualty scenarios to enhance team coordination and patient care. (Contributed Photo)
88th Healthcare Operations Squadron’s vast duties provides mass care for beneficiaries
Airmen from the 88th Healthcare Operations Squadron treat patients with various diagnoses as young as newborns at the Wright-Patterson Medical Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. The squadron serves over 36,000 enrolled beneficiaries through providing a full scope of healthcare services including internal medicine, family medicine, emergency medicine, pediatrics and 10 medical specialties; supports direct medical care; has three graduate medical education programs; averages over 500 members supporting war-fighting operations worldwide; executes a total operating budget of $40 million; and delivers 262,000 outpatient visits annually. (Courtesy photos)
88th Healthcare Operations Squadron’s vast duties provides mass care for beneficiaries
Airmen from the 88th Healthcare Operations Squadron treat patients with various diagnoses as young as newborns at the Wright-Patterson Medical Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. The squadron serves over 36,000 enrolled beneficiaries through providing a full scope of healthcare services including internal medicine, family medicine, emergency medicine, pediatrics and 10 medical specialties; supports direct medical care; has three graduate medical education programs; averages over 500 members supporting war-fighting operations worldwide; executes a total operating budget of $40 million; and delivers 262,000 outpatient visits annually. (Courtesy photos)
88th Healthcare Operations Squadron’s vast duties provides mass care for beneficiaries
Airmen from the 88th Healthcare Operations Squadron treat patients with various diagnoses as young as newborns at the Wright-Patterson Medical Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. The squadron serves over 36,000 enrolled beneficiaries through providing a full scope of healthcare services including internal medicine, family medicine, emergency medicine, pediatrics and 10 medical specialties; supports direct medical care; has three graduate medical education programs; averages over 500 members supporting war-fighting operations worldwide; executes a total operating budget of $40 million; and delivers 262,000 outpatient visits annually. (Courtesy photos)
88th Healthcare Operations Squadron’s vast duties provides mass care for beneficiaries
Airmen from the 88th Healthcare Operations Squadron treat patients with various diagnoses as young as newborns at the Wright-Patterson Medical Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. The squadron serves over 36,000 enrolled beneficiaries through providing a full scope of healthcare services including internal medicine, family medicine, emergency medicine, pediatrics and 10 medical specialties; supports direct medical care; has three graduate medical education programs; averages over 500 members supporting war-fighting operations worldwide; executes a total operating budget of $40 million; and delivers 262,000 outpatient visits annually. (Courtesy photos)
88th Healthcare Operations Squadron’s vast duties provides mass care for beneficiaries
Airmen from the 88th Healthcare Operations Squadron treat patients with various diagnoses as young as newborns at the Wright-Patterson Medical Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. The squadron serves over 36,000 enrolled beneficiaries through providing a full scope of healthcare services including internal medicine, family medicine, emergency medicine, pediatrics and 10 medical specialties; supports direct medical care; has three graduate medical education programs; averages over 500 members supporting war-fighting operations worldwide; executes a total operating budget of $40 million; and delivers 262,000 outpatient visits annually. (Courtesy photos)
88th Healthcare Operations Squadron’s vast duties provides mass care for beneficiaries
Airmen from the 88th Healthcare Operations Squadron treat patients with various diagnoses as young as newborns at the Wright-Patterson Medical Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. The squadron serves over 36,000 enrolled beneficiaries through providing a full scope of healthcare services including internal medicine, family medicine, emergency medicine, pediatrics and 10 medical specialties; supports direct medical care; has three graduate medical education programs; averages over 500 members supporting war-fighting operations worldwide; executes a total operating budget of $40 million; and delivers 262,000 outpatient visits annually. (Courtesy photos)
88 DTS does it out of sight and beneath the surface
Nicole Lindsley, 88th Diagnostics and Therapeutics Squadron Radiology Flight contractor MRI technologist, performs a scan June 21, 2023, looking at the soft tissue around a patient’s knee in the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, Medical Center MRI clinic. The flight also provides x-ray, nuclear medicine, mammography and ultrasound services to the Wright-Patt community. (U.S. Air Force photo by R.J. Oriez) (Information on the screens were blurred for privacy and security reasons)
88 DTS does it out of sight and beneath the surface
U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Isabella O’Donley, 88th Diagnostics and Therapeutics Squadron Radiology Flight radiology technician, prepares the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, Medical Center CT room for a procedure June 21, 2023. The flight also provides x-ray, MRI, nuclear medicine, mammography and ultrasound services to the Wright-Patt community. (U.S. Air Force photo by R.J. Oriez) (Badge was blurred for privacy and security reasons)
88 DTS does it out of sight and beneath the surface
Pharmacist Paul Zip, 88th Diagnostics and Therapeutics Squadron Pharmacy Flight, checks on a patient’s prescription June 20, 2023, in the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, Medical Center Atrium Pharmacy. On average the flight dispense upwards of 2,300 prescriptions a day in addition to supporting the center’s inpatients, clinics and cancer center. (U.S. Air Force photo by R.J. Oriez) (The badge was blurred for privacy and security reasons)
88 DTS does it out of sight and beneath the surface
Tiffany Hill, 88th Diagnostics and Therapeutics Squadron Laboratory Flight medical laboratory technician, starts to collect a blood donation from a volunteer, June 20, 2023, in the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, Medical Center’s blood donation center. The 88 DTS Laboratory Flight has one of the only three blood donor centers in the Air Force. (U.S. Air Force photo by R.J. Oriez) (The badge was blurred for privacy and security reasons)
88 DTS does it out of sight and beneath the surface
Yolie Gonzalez, 88th Diagnostics and Therapeutics Squadron Laboratory Flight phlebotomist, collects a blood sample June 26, 2023, from a patient in the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, Medical Center. While many may only think of the specimen collection section when thinking of the laboratory, the flight also includes histology, chemistry, hematology, microbiology, urine analysis and other departments as well. (U.S. Air Force photo by R.J. Oriez)
88 DTS does it out of sight and beneath the surface
Airman 1st Class Michael Rodriguez, 88th Diagnostics and Therapeutics Squadron Nutritional Medicine Flight, delivers lunch to a patient’s room June 14, 2023, in the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, Medical Center. In addition to feeding the center’s inpatients, the Nutritional Medicine Flight operates the center’s café; provides classes on diabetes and other nutritional health issues; and does community outreach. (U.S. Air Force photo by R.J. Oriez) (The badge was blurred for privacy and security reasons)
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Colonel Jason Anderson, Air Force Institute of Technology faculty member, stands by his son, Reeve, who wears a military outfit in support of his father in the Air Force. Reeve was assisted by Lt. Col. Cassandra Burns, 88th Medical Group pediatric neurologist, after being diagnosed with a rare case of cerebral folate deficiency at four years old, along with being diagnosed with down syndrome at birth. (Courtesy Photo)
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Reeve completes a 2022 summer triathlon. Reeve was assisted by Lt. Col. Cassandra Burns, 88th Medical Group pediatric neurologist, after being diagnosed with a rare case of cerebral folate deficiency at four years old, along with being diagnosed with down syndrome at birth. (Courtesy Photo)