Posted on 06/05/2008 4:47:53 PM PDT by SandRat
| WASHINGTON, June 5, 2008 Walter Reed Army Medical Center rolled out a sophisticated new vehicle today that will make wounded soldiers ride to the Army hospital safer and smoother.
[This is] the latest innovation in our ongoing efforts to promote and preserve the health and strength of the worlds finest servicemembers, Army Maj. Gen. Carla G. Hawley-Bowland, commander of North Atlantic Regional Medical Command and Walter Reed Army Medical Center, told the crowd on hand for the event. Hawley-Bowland called the Patient Evacuation Vehicle, or PEV, an incredible leap forward in the care and transport of injured soldiers. The PEV fits up to 12 ambulatory and 16 nonambulatory patients, more than three times the capacity of the buses currently in use. By the end of summer, the fleet is expected to grow to three PEVs, which boast smoother suspension than their Blue Bird bus counterparts, and allow hospital personnel to administer medical oxygen, air or suction to patients in need. They can transform this PEV into an intensive-care unit, Hawley-Bowland said. This capability can save countless lives during the ride from Andrews to Walter Reed. Army Secretary Pete Geren praised the leaders of industry and medicine who cooperated to help make this dream a reality. Today, so much of medicine when you get outside of the military is all about business, he said. But in the Army, medicine is all about service; its all about taking care of soldiers, taking care of their families. Every day we pledge to do better than we did the day before, Geren continued, and this is one more example of leadership at Walter Reed stepping forward to do more for the men and women who bear the battle for all of us in the United States. Army Col. Patricia Horoho, commander of the Walter Reed Health Care System, said fielding the PEV is another example of the Army hospitals dedication to serving wounded warriors. This new Patient Evacuation Vehicle shows our commitment and the commitment of the Army to providing the best care for our patients before they arrive at the hospital [as] we welcome them home, she said. In addition to transporting injured from military installations, Walter Reed will make its PEV fleet available to the National Capital Region if a mass-casualty event or other medical emergency occurs. [The PEV] also shows that we take our responsibilities to our neighbors in Washington very seriously in order to improve emergency medical preparedness, and to medically support the many special events that take place regularly in the national capital region, Horoho said. |
| Biographies: Pete Geren Related Sites: |
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We must provide only the very best for our Heroes. God bless each and every one of them.
Excellant news.
For once a decent use of my tax dollars.
No bump, but a ping.
Thank God somebody decided to finally do it right. Now send some more of these rigs to the hospital in Germany where the wounded boys go before they are brought home.
Anybody here remember the trip from Andrews in the light-green school bus? How times change!
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