Monday, November 9, 2015

FW: Warrior Care—even 63 years after death



Subject: Warrior Care—even 63 years after death
Date: Fri, 6 Nov 2015 05:32:55 -0600
From: mhs@service.govdelivery.com

Warrior Care—even 63 years after death
Health.mil
11/06/2015
Alaska plane crash

Warrior Care—even 63 years after death

Nov. 22, 1952, is a day that lives forever in the minds of the Hoblit family. It's the day when their patriarch, Air Force Col. Noel Hoblit, a military dentist, lost his life when the military cargo aircraft he was on slammed into a snow-covered glacier on a mountain in Alaska. He was returning to Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska, after an official trip to the Pentagon. 

"It was the pivotal moment in my life," said retired Air Force Lt. Col. Fred Hoblit, who was just 6 years old when his father died that fateful day. "Everything that I have done or has happened to me professionally is a result of that event." 

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Army medical personnel are expert at medical evacuations of service members, but what happens when the patient has four legs, instead of two? 

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MiCARE provides faster care

Air Force Captain Jennifer Varney likes to come to work early. As a Family Nurse Practitioner and Family Health Flight Commander at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama, she arrives at the base's Family Health Clinic around 5 a.m. and checks her computer's MiCARE site for any overnight patient emails. 

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