An official website of the United States government
Here's how you know
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

News | June 17, 2016

Warrior medics enhance skills, build relationships in Dominican Republic

By Staff Sgt. Kevin Iinuma

Airmen from the 59th Medical Wing are improving their clinical skills and building international relationships during a U.S. Southern Command-sponsored readiness training exercise in the Dominican Republic.



New Horizons 2016, which kicked off in April, brings together U.S. military civil engineers and medical professionals who conduct readiness training exercises by delivering health care services to local communities. Civil engineers are building four clinics and one school during the exercise.



Relationships built during New Horizons 2016 will benefit both countries.



The three-month exercise is enhancing the medical readiness of the 59th MDW, said Col. Glenn Yap, 59th Medical Wing vice commander and the medical mission commander.



“It is very exciting and it’s been a great experience. Our warrior medics are treating a large number of patients, including many who would normally not have access to medical care,” Yap said.



Thirty 59th MDW medics are in the Dominican Republic to support the command cell, the ambulance crew and are leading four of the 10 rotational medical/surgical teams who train in country for two-week periods. The 10 rotational teams are comprised of between 15-42 medical and dental professionals from other AF, Army and Canadian medical facilities, both active duty and guard/reserve.



Specialties include general medicine; preventative dental; general surgical; infectious disease; public health; urology; gynecology; ear, nose and throat; ophthalmology; and even veterinary, Yap said.



“(The exercise) gives our medical teams a chance to practice their clinical skills in a different environment. This helps them sharpen their skills in preparation for worldwide deployments,” Yap explained.



The wing is also participating in a medical exchange, connecting subject matter experts from each country in pediatric nutrition and public health.



“We all benefited from each other’s unique insight,” said Maj. James Townley, Joint Warfighter Refractive Surgery Center Cornea/External Disease and Refractive Surgeon.



“Some techniques we use in the U.S. are incompatible with the severity of the disease processes we find overseas, and the physicians from the Dominican Republic have more experience dealing with those advanced disease processes,” said Townley. “They are also (accustomed) with working with fewer resources than we were.”



Working with colleagues across many different medical specialties and bringing together military members from across the U.S. allowed the teams to perform a common goal: good medicine in an unfamiliar location, he added.



“I learned the importance of good logistics and fostering a close working relationship with the host nation. There were many times it was necessary to work intimately with the host nation's government and physicians to ensure our essential supplies arrived in time for us to perform our mission,” said Townley. “Without everyone's combined efforts, the mission would have been a failure.”



For more information about New Horizons 2016, visit https://www.dvidshub.net/feature/NewHorizonsDominicanRepublic2016.

COMMANDER'S PRIORITIES