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Last Updated: Sunday, November 20, 2005 10:39 AM

 

 

News Release

Auxiliarist plays key role in Medevac  
Date: Nov. 19, 2005 

Contact: Aux. Wayne Spivak
Chief - External Communications
Public Affairs Department
United States Coast Guard Auxiliary
http://www.auxpa.org

516-353-9155
Media@auxpa.org

HONOLULU – Within 10 days, Coast Guard rescue crews flew more than 4,000 miles to render aid to ailing mariners in the Pacific Ocean. On both trips a Coast Guard Auxiliarist accompanied the rescue crew as the interpreter for the mission.

Paramedics adjust Susumu Abe on the gurney as he is wheeled out of the Coast Guard C-130 aircraft. Abe was medevaced from a fishing vessel to Midway Atoll in the Pacific Ocean after suffering medical complications. Charlayne Chabala Holliday, an Auxiliarist with Mililani Flotilla 10 in Honolulu, interpreted for Abe and medical personnel at Midway, on the C-130 and for the paramedics. U.S. Coast Guard photo.A Coast Guard C-130 and crew from Air Station Barbers Point flew more than 1,100 miles one-way to medevac an ailing man from Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge Oct. 21. Susumu Abe, 48, was working as a cook aboard a Japanese fishing vessel when he reportedly suffered symptoms of a possible stroke.

The master of the Hinode Maru No. 18 requested medical assistance for Abe Oct. 19, while the vessel was more than 725 miles northeast of Midway. The master had initially contacted the Japanese Coast Guard, who then contacted the ship’s agent in Honolulu, who then contacted the Coast Guard Command Center here. A Coast Guard flight surgeon was consulted and recommended the medevac. Rescue coordinators began preparing for the rescue early Oct. 20.

The master was directed to transit to Midway, the closest land in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife service, who manages the Midway refuge, was contacted for permission to bring the foreign vessel into the environmentally-sensitive wildlife refuge and for medical assistance from the Midway staff.

Susumu Abe, a cook on a Japanese fishing vessel, discusses his medical information with Auxiliarist Charlayne Chabala Holliday, an Auxiliarist with Mililani  Flotilla 10 in Honolulu, during a four-hour, C-130 flight from Midway Atoll to Oahu. Abe served as a cook aboard the fishing vessel Hinode Maru No. 18 when he suffered medical complications. U.S. Coast Guard photo. The Japanese interpreter, Charlayne Chabala Holliday, who is a Coast Guard Auxiliarist in the Mililani Flotilla 10, was vital to the Hinode Maru No. 18’s successful mooring at Midway. The channel leading to the pier is difficult to navigate and even the slightest variation outside the marked area may run a vessel aground.

Holliday rode aboard the Fish and Wildlife’s 18-foot catamaran to guide the master into the cargo pier without incident. As soon as the Hinode Maru No. 18 was moored, Abe was transferred by truck to the awaiting C-130. Holliday was just as instrumental on the pier by translating important medical information between Abe, the master and the Fish and Wildlife’s Physician’s Assistant. Abe was readied and stabilized for the four-hour plane ride to Oahu.

Charlayne Chabala Holliday, an Auxiliarist with Mililani Flotilla 10 in Honolulu, interprets medical information for Mr. Susumu Abe, a Japanese crewman, and a Physician's Assistant at Midway Atoll National Refuge. Abe, a cook on board the Hinode Maru No. 18, suffered a possible stroke while the vessel was about 750 miles northwest of Midway. U.S. Coast Guard photo.The C-130 arrived back in Oahu at about 4 p.m. Oct. 21. The Japanese ship’s agent and an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer met Abe at the air station, where he was transferred to an awaiting ambulance for further transport to Kuakini Hospital.

Ten days later, an almost identical medical-assistance call came from another fishing vessel in the Pacific Ocean. Once again the aircrew and Auxiliarist answered the call.

During the month of October, Coast Guard rescue crews conducted 17 medevacs from across the Hawaiian Islands and the Pacific Ocean. This was a 50 per cent increase from the previous three years. Three times during the month, the Coast Guard received three requests for medical assistance.

The United States Coast Guard Auxiliary is composed of uniformed, non-military volunteer's who assist the Coast Guard in all of its varied missions, except for military and direct law enforcement. These men and women can be found on the nation's waterways, in the air, in classrooms and on the dock, performing Maritime Domain Awareness patrols, safety patrols, vessel safety checks and public education.

The United States Coast Guard Auxiliary was founded in 1939 by an Act of Congress as the U.S. Coast Guard Reserve and re-designated as the Auxiliary in 1941. Its 30,000 members donate millions of hours annually in support of Coast Guard missions.

For more information on the United States Coast Guard Auxiliary, visit us at www.cgaux.org.

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