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250221-F-WJ837-1001
The Lesser Antilles Medical Assistance Team (LAMAT) 2025, led by AFSOUTH Surgeon General, will embed Air Force Reserve Command medical personnel within host nation hospitals and clinics across the Lesser Antilles region and Guyana. These Global Health Engagements enhance military readiness, strengthen partner nation healthcare systems, and foster resilience through expertise sharing and collaboration with local providers.
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250226-F-EW070-1008
The Lesser Antilles Medical Assistance Team (LAMAT) 2025 stand outside Owen King European Union (OKEU) Hospital for a group photo at Castries, Saint Lucia, Feb. 26, 2025. LAMAT stands as a symbol of partnership through medical readiness, offering real-world benefits to achieve positive outcomes through collaboration with partner nations. (US Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Ryan Green)
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250226-F-VH914-1011
Medical equipment is laid out at an intubation station at the Military Medical Simulation Center in Sofia, Bulgaria, Feb. 26, 2025. By utilizing state-of-the-art medical simulators, the center ensured personnel can practice complex trauma interventions under conditions that mirror battlefield stress. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Dylan Myers)
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250226-F-VH914-1032
North Macedonian Army Capt. Viktorija Arsova, North Macedonian 2nd Infantry Battalion medical doctor, intubates a mannequin at the Military Medical Simulation Center in Sofia, Bulgaria, Feb. 26, 2025. By equipping personnel with life-saving skills, the course strengthened unit resilience, minimizing combat fatalities and preserving force strength during operations. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Dylan Myers)
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250226-F-VH914-1045
Bulgarian Multilateral Medical Simulation Training Engagement participants unify medical practices at the Military Medical Simulation Center in Sofia, Bulgaria, Feb. 26, 2025. Providing soldiers with advanced medical training can increase their survivability, ensuring that forces remain combat-effective despite potential threats in the region. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Dylan Myers)
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250226-F-VH914-1079
Bulgarian Multilateral Medical Simulation Training Engagement instructors from the U.S. and Bulgaria explain how to wrap a foil blanket around wounded military personnel at the Military Medical Simulation Center in Sofia, Bulgaria, Feb. 26, 2025. Bulgaria invited 10 countries from eastern Europe and Eurasia to the simulation center allowing soldiers to refine life-saving skills before facing real-world combat scenarios. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Dylan Myers)
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250226-F-VH914-1154
Bulgarian Multilateral Medical Simulation Training Engagement participants tend to a simulated wounded military personnel at Military Medical Simulation Center in Sofia, Bulgaria, Feb. 26, 2025. This training enhanced mission readiness in the European theater by ensuring that military personnel can provide immediate and effective medical care in austere and high-threat environments. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Dylan Myers)
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250227-F-VH914-1018
Tereza Ivanova, a Bulgarian nursing student, provides simulated cover fire while medics tend to a casualty at the Military Medical Simulation Center during Bulgarian Multilateral Medical Simulation Training Engagement in Sofia, Bulgaria, Feb. 27, 2025. The simulation center provided a controlled yet realistic training environment, allowing soldiers to refine life-saving skills before facing real-world combat scenarios. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Dylan Myers)
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250227-F-VH914-1027
Bulgarian Multilateral Medical Simulation Training Engagement participants tend to simulated wounded military personnel at the Military Medical Simulation Center in Sofia, Bulgaria, Feb. 27, 2025. This program ensured that every soldier, regardless of their role, became a force multiplier in casualty care, directly contributing to the readiness and resilience of forward-deployed forces. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Dylan Myers)
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250227-F-VH914-1112
An Armed Forces of Montenegro medical doctor tends to a simulated wounded military personnel in a later stage of the mass casualty simulation during the Bulgarian Multilateral Medical Simulation Training Engagement at the Military Medical Simulation Center in Sofia, Bulgaria, Feb. 27, 2025. With realistic combat scenarios, this training can sharpen decision-making under pressure, a critical factor in sustaining mission effectiveness across the European theater. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Dylan Myers)
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250228-F-EW070-1220
Lt Col Puneet Pande, left, and Tech. Sgt. Jasmine Abalos, right, 349th Medical Squadron, treat a patient for a tooth filling during the Lesser Antilles Medical Assistance Team (LAMAT) mission at the Anse La Raye Health & Wellness Centre, Saint Lucia, Feb. 28, 2025. The LAMAT mission gives U.S. and host nation medical professionals a unique opportunity to hone their skills in resource-constrained environments and benefits the citizens of each host nation. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Ryan Green)
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250228-F-EW070-1220
Lt Col Puneet Pande, left, and Tech. Sgt. Jasmine Abalos, right, 349th Medical Squadron, treat a patient for a tooth filling during the Lesser Antilles Medical Assistance Team (LAMAT) mission at the Anse La Raye Health & Wellness Centre, Saint Lucia, Feb. 28, 2025. The LAMAT mission gives U.S. and host nation medical professionals a unique opportunity to hone their skills in resource-constrained environments and benefits the citizens of each host nation. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Ryan Green)
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250228-F-EW070-1220
Lt Col Puneet Pande, left, and Tech. Sgt. Jasmine Abalos, right, 349th Medical Squadron, treat a patient for a tooth filling during the Lesser Antilles Medical Assistance Team (LAMAT) mission at the Anse La Raye Health & Wellness Centre, Saint Lucia, Feb. 28, 2025. The LAMAT mission gives U.S. and host nation medical professionals a unique opportunity to hone their skills in resource-constrained environments and benefits the citizens of each host nation. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Ryan Green)
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250304-F-WJ837-1041
Dr. Richard Burt, a general surgeon at St. Jude Hospital, watches U.S. Air Force Col. Robert Knoll, 349th Medical Squadron commander and vascular surgeon, and Tech. Sgt. Michael Jones, 349th Medical Squadron surgical technician, perform a Arteriovenous Fistula procedure on a patient during the Lesser Antilles Medical Assistance Team mission at St. Jude Hospital in Vieux Fort, Saint Lucia, March 4, 2025. The LAMAT mission allows U.S. and host nation medical professionals a unique opportunity to work together, promoting global health, readiness, and ultimately benefiting both military personnel and the citizens of the host nation. (U.S. Air Force photo by Andrea Jenkins)
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250304-F-WJ837-1067
Capt. Mayra Mendoza, 349th Medical Squadron certified registered nurse anesthetist, documents vital signs and surgical milestones throughout an Arteriovenous Fistula procedure during the Lesser Antilles Medical Assistance Team mission at St. Jude Hospital in Vieux Fort, Saint Lucia, March 4, 2025. LAMAT fosters collaboration between U.S. and host nation medical teams in order to facilitate knowledge sharing and skills transfer, strengthening the host nation's own healthcare capabilities. (U.S. Air Force photo by Andrea Jenkins)
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250304-F-WJ837-1086
U.S. Air Force Col. Robert Knoll, 349th Medical Squadron commander and vascular surgeon, conducts a Arteriovenous Fistula procedure on a patient during the Lesser Antilles Medical Assistance Team mission at St. Jude Hospital in Vieux Fort, Saint Lucia, March 4, 2025. Knoll, a vascular surgeon, is addressing a critical shortage of specialized care by performing life-saving vascular surgery in St. Lucia, simultaneously honing essential skills for future U.S. military deployments. The LAMAT mission seeks to strengthen U.S. partnerships within Latin America and the Caribbean region by providing relief to overwhelmed medical facilities through collaboration with host nation medical practitioners and respective Ministry of Health officials. (U.S. Air Force photo by Andrea Jenkins)
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250305-F-WJ837-1435
Lesser Antilles Medical Assistance Team members conduct an ultrasound-guided nerve block on a patient during the LAMAT mission at Owen King European Union Hospital in Castries, Saint Lucia, March 5, 2025. The nerve block procedure blocks pain from reaching specific nerves and can speed recovery and reduce need for post-surgery pain medication. LAMAT fosters collaboration between U.S. and host nation medical teams to facilitate knowledge sharing and skills transfer, strengthening the host nation's own healthcare capabilities. (U.S. Air Force photo by Andrea Jenkins)
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250305-F-WJ837-1455
Medical professionals conduct an ultrasound-guided nerve block on a patient during the Lesser Antilles Medical Assistance Team mission at Owen King European Union Hospital in Castries, Saint Lucia, March 5, 2025. The nerve block procedure blocks pain from reaching specific nerves and can speed recovery and reduce need for post-surgery pain medication. LAMAT fosters collaboration between U.S. and host nation medical teams to facilitate knowledge sharing and skills transfer, strengthening the host nation's own healthcare capabilities. (U.S. Air Force photo by Andrea Jenkins)
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250308-Z-AU266-1050
U.S. Air Force Col. Daniel Martinie, North Carolina Joint Force Headquarters-Air, State Air Surgeon poses for a photo on the flightline at Charlotte-Douglas International Airport base, March 8, 2025. Martinie is being highlighted for being named one of North Carolina’s best doctors for 2024.
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250308-Z-AU266-1052
U.S. Air Force Col. Daniel Martinie, North Carolina Joint Force Headquarters-Air, State Air Surgeon and Staff Sgt. Idris cates, 145th Medical Group, medical technician pose for a photo in an exam room at Charlotte-Douglas International Airport base, March 8, 2025. Martinie is being highlighted for being named one of North Carolina’s best doctors for 2024.
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