Monday, September 18, 2017

Military Health System of Washington, D.C., United States for Monday, 18 September 2017 "The Defense Health Agency is hiring"

Military Health System of Washington, D.C., United States for Monday, 18 September 2017 "The Defense Health Agency is hiring"
The Defense Health Agency is hiring
The Defense Health Agency is scheduled to take part in two upcoming Department of Defense-sponsored job fairs Sept. 20 at Joint Base San Antonio, Texas, and Nov. 15 at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in the Washington, D.C., area. (U.S. Navy photo by Joseph Fordham)

FALLS CHURCH, Va. — Would you like to serve with those who provide health care to 9.4 million eligible service members, military retirees, and their families? Then the Defense Health Agency is looking for you. The agency is scheduled to take part in two upcoming Department of Defense-sponsored job fairs Sept. 20 at Joint Base San Antonio, Texas, and Nov. 15 at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in the Washington, D.C., area.
“The DHA has a very important mission,” said Larry Bolton, chief of the agency’s human resources division. “These job fairs are a way of educating the public about who we are and what we do.”
While many of the agency’s people work in the health care field, Bolton emphasized that the need is for more than just doctors, nurses, and other care providers.
“We have more than 95 occupations in the DHA,” said Bolton. “Not only do we need clinicians, but we also have opportunities for administrative specialties that play a vital role in providing health care to the Military Health System. We want a diversity of thought and a diversity of cultural backgrounds in our applicants and eventual employees.”
Despite the popularity of electronic documents, Bolton recommends that those attending the job fair come armed with a stack of printed resumes and questions about the DHA for the recruiters on hand. Many of the positions to be filled include information technology and procurement.
“These events give our hiring managers a chance to speak face-to-face with the applicants,” said Bolton. “If you have the skill sets and qualifications needed, being prepared and having good questions could give you a leg up later on when the hiring process formally begins,” he said, adding that if you don’t get hired this time, don’t give up; other opportunities with DHA will come along.
Other DoD and federal agencies will also attend these career fairs, as well as civilian companies, so attendees should be able to find a good fit for them. Bolton thinks DHA has a lot to offer a job seeker.
“We have a great organization with a wonderful mission and a responsibility that serves this nation,” said the retired Army medical service corps veteran and current DoD civilian. “I’ve been in DoD for more than 39 years, and every day is a new challenge. I’m honored to serve. For individuals that have the right skills, whether they’ve been in the military or not, it’s an opportunity to make a difference and join an organization on the leading edge of 21st century health care.”
For more information on these and other DoD career fairs, check out the DoD’s Hiring Heroes Program website.
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First cold storage platelet unit collected in Southwest AsiaAir Force Staff Sgt. Jonathan Flannigan, NCO in charge of the apheresis element with the 379th Expeditionary Medical Group, monitors the Trima Accel Automated Blood Collection System machine used to obtain blood platelets from donors at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar. Apheresis element Airmen are tasked with collecting and storing platelet products and providing them for distribution throughout the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Cynthia A. Innocenti).
AL UDEID AIR BASE, Qatar — Recently, Al Udeid Air Base shipped its first unit of cold storage platelets to a location within the U.S. Air Forces Central Command Area of Responsibility. The shipment marked the first time cold storage platelets have been stored and shipped from Al Udeid Air Base for use in the AOR. The platelets were collected from a volunteer donor and processed by the Apheresis Element here.
“This is huge for the war fighter,” said U.S. Air Force Capt. Becky Pederson, chief assigned to the Apheresis Element of the 379th Expeditionary Medical Group.
Platelets are separated out and collected during apheresis at Al Udeid, Air Base, Qatar. The platelets will be shipped to locations across the U.S. Central Command Area of Responsibility using a cold storage platelets technique. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Bradly A. Schneider)
Pederson explained that CSP is a new technique involving the handling, storage and shipment of platelets. By authorizing the use of CSP for DoD purposes outside of the United States, U.S. Central Command has made it possible to ship platelets to remote locations where they have not been available in the past. The current standards for handling platelets, approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, known as room temperature platelets, require platelets to be stored at room temperature, limiting the shelf life to five to seven days and requiring constant agitation making it nearly impossible to ship to locations where equipment and access is limited.
The process for CSP has many advantages over the current FDA approved room temperature method. While room temperature platelets are susceptible to bacterial contamination, CSP are stored in a refrigerated environment with the likelihood of bacterial contamination nearly eliminated. In addition, RTPs must sit for 24 hours before they can be tested for bacteria prior to shipment, further limiting the viable shelf life of the product. CSP, on the other hand, can be tested within one hour of collection and shipped in a cooler the same day, possibly arriving to the field hospital with eight or nine days of shelf life.
“It changes the entire strategy for transfusions; I think it’s a very exciting development,” said Air Force Capt. Timothy Sommerville, internal medicine doctor assigned to the 379th EMG, referring to the use of CSP. “I think it has the potential to really move field medicine closer in line with the standard of care in the United States.”
There are two general options for treating a patient with significant blood loss. A doctor can conduct a transfusion using whole blood or use blood component therapy.
“Component therapy is a gold standard,” said Pederson. Safer than using whole blood, component therapy is the most commonly accepted method for conducting blood transfusions.
Packed red blood cells and blood plasma have been available in the field for some time, and now CSP gives doctors all the components they need to use blood component therapy in trauma centers across the AOR. Blood component therapy refers to the procedure where blood is delivered to a patient in three separate components; packed red blood cells, blood plasma and blood platelets.
Blood used in whole blood therapy is available in two forms. The first form consists of pre-packaged units collected from donors, which are shipped and stored under refrigerated conditions. The second and more common form in battlefield conditions, explained Sommerville, is whole blood collected from a “walking blood bank” or, in other words, someone with the right blood type who is willing to donate then and there. The problem with a walking blood bank, however, is that although you get a fresh supply of vibrant blood, rejection is always a real possibility when using whole blood.
“There is almost no situation within the United States in which we would give whole blood,” said Sommerville. He goes onto explain that whole blood therapy is generally outdated and only used when component therapy is not an option.
“Most facilities down range do not have the capability to store platelets,” said Pederson, in reference to the FDA approved method of platelet storage.
Blood platelets are collected through the process of apheresis, which lasts approximately two hours. During that time, the donor’s blood is removed through a needle inserted in the vein above the elbow. The blood is circulated through an apheresis machine, where the platelets are separated out and the blood, minus the platelets, is returned to the donor. The process is comfortable and safe and most donors leave feeling great and generally unaffected by the donation.
It is very likely that CSP, a method developed by the military to advance the capabilities for saving lives in the field, will eventually be the standard practice used around the world for handling and shipping platelets.
“It’s a game changer, that’s for sure,” said Sommerville.
Disclaimer: Re-published content may have been edited for length and clarity. Read original post.
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