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An
aeromedical team evacuates a victim of the Bali Blasts.
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THE
Australian Defence Force's Aeromedical Evacuation (AME) team proved
during Op Bali that it possessed the skills and training to successfully
cope with a crisis, rightfully earning plaudits from within and
outside military circles.
There have been times when AME teams have been called on to move
greater numbers of patients, but never before have they moved so
many seriously injured people in such a short space of time.
The Bali bombing, of course, was not the first disaster the AME
teams have been called to, with Cyclone Tracy, the Vietnam War and
other war and peacetime events demanding their specialised services.
Medical evacuation teams were formed in Australia during World War
2 when the need to transport the sick and wounded by air became
too great to ignore.
Australian military services first recognised the need in the 1930s,
but a lack of resources at the time prevented the development of
such a capability.
A Wapiti aircraft was modified to take a stretcher and undertook
a successful experimental flight but the concept was not progressed
because of lack of funds and aircraft. The outbreak of war in 1939
provided the incentive.
Air ambulances were used by Australia from February 1941 to transport
the sick and wounded from the forward areas to medical treatment
or to hospitals.
No. 1 Air Ambulance Unit had extensive service in the Middle East
Campaigns from 1941 while No. 2 Air Ambulance Unit was established
for duties within Australia in March 1942.
The New Guinea campaigns of 1942, which resulted in numerous sick
and wounded, caught the Australians and Americans under-prepared
as there was no organisation of medical personnel available to care
for patients in-flight, and no medical kits or oxygen were carried
for patients when flying between 12,000-15,000 feet.
A United States unit - the 804th Medical Air Evacuation Squadron
(MAES) - arrived in the Pacific theatre in September 1943.
Soon after, Australian Air Force medical officer Squadron Leader
Winston Kiel and 12 orderlies were attached to the 804th MAES to
work with the Americans. The Air Force then formed its own medical
evacuation transport unit.
Sisters (now nursing officers) and orderlies volunteered and undertook
three weeks of training at the Medical Training Unit in Victoria
in April 1944. They were then posted to the newly formed No. 1 Medical
Air Evacuation Transport Unit (MAETU).
By October 1944, 1MAETU was responsible for all air evacuations
out of New Guinea as the Americans moved to the Philippines.
The unit expanded to cope with demand and in May 1945 was split
to form 1 and 2MAETUs. 1MAETU remained at Lae and 2MAETU moved to
Morotai.
The teams consisted of three medical officers, 24 sisters and 24
orderlies. In September 1945, staff from No 2 MAETU undertook the
evacuation of prisoners-of-war from South-East Asia to Singapore
and then back to either Darwin or Townsville. About 8000 patients
were evacuated from Singapore.
During WW2, two aircraft carrying sick and wounded plus a sister
and an orderly each were lost in aircraft accidents. By November
1945, 2MAETU was disbanded and a nucleus of 1MAETU transferred to
40 Operational Base Unit in February 1946.
The efforts of the medical officers, sisters and orderlies during
WW2 laid a solid foundation in the Air Force for successful air
evacuation of sick and wounded under adverse conditions.
- By
WGCDR Maxine Dahl
Information for this article was taken from records held by
the RAAF Historical Section.
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