Showing posts with label FOB Salerno Hospital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FOB Salerno Hospital. Show all posts

Monday, 3 September 2007

Afghans help build mosque, hospital in border region

By Bryan Mitchell,
Stars and Stripes Mideast edition,
Monday, September 3, 2007


FORWARD OPERATING BASE SALERNO, Afghanistan —

The only sound more frequent than the echo of helicopter blades across this forward operating base is the banging of hammers.

As choppers come and go, ferrying wounded troops and combat boots across southeastern Afghanistan, scores of indigenous laborers sweat under the relentless sun converting this once-spartan base into an enduring compound for coalition forces and, some day, the Afghan National Army.

The most significant project under way is construction of a new hospital to replace the makeshift tent complex now home to the 396th Combat Support Hospital. U.S. contracting company KBR is overseeing a crew of several dozen Afghans working to finish the $1.4 million, 23,000-square-foot hospital by December.

The hospital’s commander said the new complex will provide a safer and more sterile environment, boosting both security and hygiene for physicians and patients.

“We still get rockets and mortars occasionally, and it’s much better to have concrete and mortar over your head,” said 396th commander Lt. Col. Richard Phillips. “This building will replace the tents, partly so we don’t have to evacuate when we get rocketed and partly for a cleaner environment.”

Located approximately 10 miles from the Pakistan border in a region teetering between volatility and relative calm, FOB Salerno is in a spot where militants can fire rockets and mortar rounds toward the base, and then flee into the often-lawless border region.

Lately, the hospital has been busier than in the recent past, tending to 300 percent more patients than at this time last summer. While the military and the media focus on the “surge” in Iraq, insurgents in this country have boosted their attacks, increasingly with more potent Iraq-style tactics such as car bombs, suicide vests and roadside explosions.

Last week, the 396th Combat Support Hospital cared for a cadre of children caught in two vicious suicide attacks in Khost province, including one that killed three U.S. troops working on a reconstruction project. If the trend continues, the hospital under construction will be well received.

Phillips, 45, of Sioux Falls, S.D., said the hospital will be divided into two parts: a trauma wing for emergency care; and a primary care section to deal with traditional aches, pains, illnesses and ailment.

Like its nylon predecessor, the hospital also will play host to the occasional Afghan health clinic, providing surgeries and treatments unavailable in the rest of the poverty-stricken Khost province.

KBR has a handful of engineers on hand to supervise, but the majority of labor is conducted by Afghans. They earn roughly $8 to $11 per day for work that includes plastering, framing and roofing.

KBR supervisor Randy Gustafson, 49, of Bellingham, Wash., said the Afghans are eager to work and quick to learn

A lot of them show up with very little skill in construction, but we’re teaching them along the way, showing them how to do things,” Gustafson said.



Afghans also are developing skills to build a new mosque in the heart of the base.

On Thursday, Sgt. Dane Seydler, 26, an Army reservist from Amarillo, Texas, was supervising a team of locals sanding the mosque before its next coat of paint.

Before this, they just did their own thing, but now they come over here at lunch to eat and pray,” Seydler said.

Phillips said the hospital, as well as other smaller projects on FOB Salerno like the mosque, are vital to the image that America is here to help, but not here to stay.

All the stuff we do is with the attitude that the Afghans will one day take it over,” he said.

It’s not just a slogan anymore,

Afghans are doing the work,

Afghans are learning the work.

We want to send a clear message that we are not here forever.

This is your base, and you have to decide how to run it."




Richard's posts on continuing hospital construction:

http://deploymenttoafghanistan.blogspot.com/2007/04/week-11-life-on-fob.html

http://deploymenttoafghanistan.blogspot.com/2007/04/week-13-beginning-of-long-hot-summer.html

http://deploymenttoafghanistan.blogspot.com/2007/05/week-16-sun-comes-out-again.html

http://deploymenttoafghanistan.blogspot.com/2007/06/week-20-groundhog-day-again.html

http://deploymenttoafghanistan.blogspot.com/2007/06/week-22-progress-continues.html

http://deploymenttoafghanistan.blogspot.com/2007/07/week-23-soldier-on.html

Thank you
for reading and praying and caring.
Thank you
for remembering the Soldiers in Afghanistan, the “other” war.


Phillips, OUT

Gratitude and Prayers for all our warriors in Afghanistan and their families supporting them at home --- Haole

Friday, 31 August 2007

A Tour of FOB Salerno Hospital


Who is in Afghanistan, saving lives and easing suffering of US and Coalition casualties and injured Afghan civilians, I thought you might enjoy seeing some of the people here at the Salerno Hospital.






LtCol Howard Phillipi,
Chief Nurse









Mike and Fred
on duty
in the Hosptial HQ






The most important
part of our hospital is the people.


We’re an eclectic mix of Army and Air Force, Active Duty and Reserve, old and young. We’re half Army, half Air Force. We come from all over the country; from Washington State, California, Maine, Florida and everywhere in between.

We’ve got Active duty Army and Air Force, Army and Air Force Reserve, and Air National Guard.

Our youngest Soldier is 19; our oldest Soldier is 55 years old.




Jena, Sara, Patrict
X-ray and
Respiratory Therapy






Catie (patient?),
Loretta, Danielle,
and Susan

On the WARD






We are a trauma unit. We don’t care for many sick people.
We deal with lots of trauma; gunshot wounds, blast injuries, motor vehicle accidents and falls, to name a few.

Lots of open fractures.
Lots of penetrating injuries.
Lots of amputations.
And Lots of other things not suitable for this blog.


Chrystal and Angela
OR Tech
&
OR Nurse


Ready for a Patient






The controlled chaos

of the Emergency Room








Combat Trama
Surgery










Cpt James Goode
CRNA





Cleaning up after the MASCAL

(Mass Casualty Event)

We’ve got all the important parts of a hospital:

Operating Room, Intensive Care Ward, X-Ray, Laboratory, Pharmacy and even a CT scanner, but we're still in tents with wooden floors. The FOB itself is still very primitive. On our FOB there are no paved streets. When it rains, it floods. The hospital floods, the streets flood, the gym floods.

If you wear your rubber boots, you’re fine. Otherwise, you get wet feet.




So there it is, a peek inside our facility,

a peek at our people and our home.

(I thought it would be interesting to all who have followed this blog for the past eight months.)



Thank you

for reading and praying and caring.



Thank you

for remembering the Soldiers in Afghanistan, the “other” war.

Phillips, OUT

Thursday, 30 August 2007

We've got a reporter from Stars and Stripes with us for a few days.

Such simple words from Phillips, but what a story.

The story of our warriors and the treatment they receive at FOB Salerno Hospital is nothing new to anyone at Richard's Deployment to Afghanistan. Afghan Nationals receiving the same great treatment, and the their gratitude, again is nothing new to the reader's of Phillips' blog.

But it is gratifying to see it recognized by Stars and Stripes.

You can contact Bryan Mitchell, Stars and Stripes to thank him for the article: mitchellb@estripes.osd.mil . --Haole--




Stars & Stripes
Front page:









Spc. Jeffrey Ellis on Wednesday holds up a piece of shrapnel that hit him in a suicide bomber attack the previous day. It was removed from his body but he's expected to receive further care in Germany.

Stars & Stripes
Mideast edition, Thursday, August 30, 2007
Bryan Mitchell / S&S



Soldier, Afghan children recovering from suicide blast



I promise Rich's pictures and blog will be forthcoming.

Phillips isn't procrastinating, he's thinking . . .



FOB Salerno Hospital is taking care of business.

I want to take advantage of a rare opportunity to officially issue personal thanks in the form of Gratitude and Prayers for all our FOB Salerno Hospital warriors.

I am proud of the job they do, and the people they are.
(There are pictures coming. . . )

I know all of you appreciate this group of guys, gals and their families.


-- Haole Wahine--