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  2. Casualty evacuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualty_evacuation

    The U.S. military has worked to ensure dedicated MEDEVAC platforms with trained medical personnel are available in the event of a casualty. This has, in part, led to a 90.6% casualty survival rate (numbers from operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, 2006), compared to 80.9% in World War II. [8]

  3. Battlefield medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battlefield_medicine

    Requests for evacuation of casualties and pertinent information are typically communicated through 9-Line MEDEVAC and MIST reports. [34] Tactical evaluation is an umbrella term that encompasses both medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) and casualty evacuation (CASEVAC).

  4. Medical evacuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_evacuation

    An AW109 helicopter evacuates a patient from the Tatra mountains in Slovakia. Medical evacuation, often shortened to medevac [1] or medivac, [1] is the timely and efficient movement and en route care provided by medical personnel to patients requiring evacuation or transport using medically equipped air ambulances, helicopters and other means of emergency transport including ground ambulance ...

  5. List of accidents and incidents involving military aircraft ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_accidents_and...

    The airman, whose name was withheld pending notification of family, was walking beside a wing of the attack bomber as it was being towed by a small tractor from the hangar to the flight-line, a Navy spokesman said. [257] 4 January The Second Gulf of Sidra incident occurs when two USN Grumman F-14 Tomcats shoot down two Libyan Air Force MiG-23s ...

  6. Aeromedical evacuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeromedical_Evacuation

    Aeromedical evacuation personnel continue to be trained at USAFSAM at present. The US Navy joined the mission in 1944 by using various seaplanes and PB4Y aircraft to fly patients from remote Pacific islands to larger bases and on to stateside hospitals. By the war's end more than 1.3 million patients had been transported worldwide, with fewer ...

  7. HA(L)-3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HA(L)-3

    Initially, the Brown-water Navy was supported by elements of the US Army's 145th Combat Aviation Battalion who had greater experience in helicopter gunship operations and tactics. Operating off a "Mothership", the USS Belle Grove, the Army and Navy worked together on Operation Jackstay.

  8. 57th Medical Detachment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/57th_Medical_Detachment

    The regulation established the priority as: U.S. military and civilian personnel; members of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Vietnam; and other personnel for humanitarian reasons. This same regulation also established the procedures to be followed for requesting aeromedical evacuation using a standardized nine-line medical evacuation request.

  9. Charles L. Kelly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_L._Kelly

    Major Charles Livingston Kelly (10 April 1925 – 1 July 1964) was a United States Army helicopter pilot and medical evacuation unit commander during the Vietnam War.Because of the central role he played in the development of early battlefield evacuation techniques during the war—and the central role his death on the battlefield played in cementing those techniques in Army doctrine at a time ...