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SAN DIEGO (Aug. 5, 2025) – Navy Medicine Readiness and Training Command San Diego (NMRTC SD) Sailors assigned to Casualty Receiving and Treatment Ship (CRTS) Teams 2, 8, and 9 participated in an amphibious familiarization training evolution aboard the Wasp-class amphibious assault ship USS Boxer (LHD 4) as part of a multi-team exercise designed to sustain medical readiness and operational integration with amphibious warfare platforms. The training, led by Naval Medical Forces Pacific (NMFP) and executed in coordination with NMRTC SD, is a critical component of preparing medical personnel to provide rapid, mobile, and flexible acute medical care in support of deployed Marine Air Ground Task Forces (MAGTF) and Naval Expeditionary Forces. Prior to the shipboard phase, the participating CRTS teams completed a classroom-based didactic portion of the training at NMRTC San Diego on August 4, covering platform capabilities, mission scope, and integration expectations. “Exercises like these are essential to building confidence and cohesion between our CRTS teams and the ship’s medical department,” said Officer-in-Charge of CRTS-2, Lt. Cmdr. Mayra Monarrez. “It ensures we can step aboard, plug into operations, and immediately contribute to patient care and mission success—whether it’s trauma, surgery, or critical care.” During the familiarization, CRTS members toured multiple departments aboard Boxer, developed a working knowledge of patient flow and casualty triage procedures, and conducted integration drills to simulate real-world patient movement during amphibious operations. The evolution also emphasized expanded surgical capability, with a focus on orthopedic surgery, increased nursing capacity, and ancillary service integration to support prolonged care at sea. CRTS packages are designed by Navy Medicine to augment amphibious assault ships with specialized personnel, equipping them to serve as floating Role 2 Enhanced (R2E) medical treatment facilities. These capabilities are critical to supporting combat operations and humanitarian missions alike.
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