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Hospital Corpsman 1st Class Kelvin Cabacungan and LCDR Conor Hymes, assigned to Emergency Resuscitative Surgical System (ERSS) Bravo perform surgery on  on a simulated a high fidelity manikin trainer as part of an Operational Readiness Evaluation (ORE) of Navy EXMED capabilities at Naval Expeditionary Medical Training Institute (NEMTI), March 17. The trainer is a lifelike medical training tool that can breathe, bleed, and react physiologically like a real patient. ERSS, and ERCS are components of Navy’s expeditionary medicine capabilities that provide a ready, rapidly deployable and combat effective medical force to improve survivability across the full spectrum of care, regardless of environment. and provides targeted lifesaving interventions to patients onboard platforms and in austere environments without clinically compromising the patients’ condition. The Navy Medicine Operational Training Command (NMOTC) is the Navy’s leader in operational medicine and trains specialty providers for aviation, surface, submarine, expeditionary, and special operations communities. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Russell Lindsey SW/AW)
240319-N-BC658-1362.JPG Photo By: Petty Officer 1st Class Russell

Apr 11, 2024
Camp Pendleton, CA - Hospital Corpsman 1st Class Kelvin Cabacungan and LCDR Conor Hymes, assigned to Emergency Resuscitative Surgical System (ERSS) Bravo perform surgery on on a simulated a high fidelity manikin trainer as part of an Operational Readiness Evaluation (ORE) of Navy EXMED capabilities at Naval Expeditionary Medical Training Institute (NEMTI), March 17. The trainer is a lifelike medical training tool that can breathe, bleed, and react physiologically like a real patient. ERSS, and ERCS are components of Navy’s expeditionary medicine capabilities that provide a ready, rapidly deployable and combat effective medical force to improve survivability across the full spectrum of care, regardless of environment. and provides targeted lifesaving interventions to patients onboard platforms and in austere environments without clinically compromising the patients’ condition. The Navy Medicine Operational Training Command (NMOTC) is the Navy’s leader in operational medicine and trains specialty providers for aviation, surface, submarine, expeditionary, and special operations communities. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Russell Lindsey SW/AW)


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