Troops in Liberia help train Ebola treatment providers

By Sgt. 1st Class Nathan Hoskins, JFC-UA public affairsNovember 4, 2014

Ebola treatment
1 / 6 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Sgt. Kevin Scranton-Chaney, a DoD Ebola Training Team trainer, Joint Forces Command -- United Assistance, teaches volunteers how to properly mix the decontaminate solution used at Ebola treatment units, during one of the numerous classes held at the ... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Ebola treatment
2 / 6 Show Caption + Hide Caption – The first class of volunteers who will work in Ebola treatment units search a simulated room for possible contaminates during medical training at the National Police Training Center, Paynesville, Liberia, Oct. 30, 2014. The participants work through ... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Ebola treatment
3 / 6 Show Caption + Hide Caption – The DoD Ebola Training Team, comprised of service members from the Army, Air Force and Navy, train the first class of volunteers who will staff Ebola treatment units in Liberia, Oct. 30, 2014, at the National Police Training Center, Paynesville, Libe... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Ebola treatment
4 / 6 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Col. Laura Favand, the chief of training, DoD Ebola Training Program, Joint Forces Command -- United Assistance, explains to Maj. Gen. Gary Volesky, the JFC-UA commander, what the Ebola treatment unit volunteers encounter during their medical trainin... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Liberia
5 / 6 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Crew members of the 2nd General Support Aviation Battalion, 501st Aviation Regiment, 1st Combat Aviation Brigade, 1st Armored Division, Fort Bliss, Texas, with the help of Air Force personnel, unload a UH-60L Black Hawk helicopter from a C-17 Globema... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Liberia
6 / 6 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Crew members of the 2nd General Support Aviation Battalion, 501st Aviation Regiment, 1st Combat Aviation Brigade, 1st Armored Division, Fort Bliss, Texas, with the help of Air Force personnel, unload a UH-60L Black Hawk helicopter from a C-17 Globema... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

MONROVIA, Liberia (Army News Service, Nov. 3, 2014) -- The Joint Forces Command -- United Assistance Defense Department Ebola Training Team, or DETT, graduated the first class of health care providers, who started work at Ebola treatment units, or ETUs, Oct. 31 at the National Police Training Center in Paynesville, Liberia.

The training consisted of eight to 10 days of hands-on and classroom instruction split in two phases, called the cold and hot phases.

The cold phase, conducted by the DETT, was composed of Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen trainers, led by Col. Laura Favand, DETT chief of training. The troops are training health care providers, not directly treating Ebola patients.

In the cold phase, students undertook five days of intense, repetitive training in a simulated ETU. The trainers went over every detail multiple times to ensure every volunteer learned and retained the necessary skills, said Lt. Col. Matt Fandre, the command surgeon for JFC-UA.

To make the training more realistic, the DETT constructed a maze of half-walled rooms that simulated areas in an actual ETU. Here the students went through multiple scenarios they might encounter and practiced routine procedures that are critical to controlling the spread of Ebola.

They also learned how to identify possible patients, admit them, and route them through the ETU correctly. In one training scenario, a student in the class mimicked varying degrees of the symptoms of Ebola while another student was being evaluated on whether or not he could correctly identify if the patient should be admitted.

To better prepare the health care workers, the DETT also brought in Ebola survivors to interact with the students, giving them first-hand accounts of what Ebola patients experience, said Fandre. This mentally prepared the volunteers for what they'll encounter.

The hot phase training is conducted by nongovernmental organizations, during which the students cared for Ebola patients for three to five days in an operational ETU under close supervision, he said.

Though the hot phase may seem intimidating, those feelings were alleviated by consistent, repetitive, hands-on training during the cold phase, said Sgt. Kevin Scranton-Chaney, a DETT trainer. The students are held to the highest standard of perfection.

Every technique, from sanitizing hands to taking off personal protective equipment, has to be perfect or it could mean more lives lost, said Scranton-Chaney. It's especially important because teaching one volunteer incorrectly can have a ripple effect among the other volunteers.

Initially, the training is for volunteers who will work in the ETUs, but it will change into a course for personnel who will also travel and teach these techniques, said Fandre. This will allow Liberians to continue the course without assistance.

The current form of training will continue weekly until it is no longer needed, said Fandre. Eventually the DETT will create a mobile training team that will travel with a transportable simulated ETU so that location will be less of an issue for those willing to volunteer.

In this first class, the DETT trained 58 healthcare workers, 12 support staff, and 21 cadre members in the first phase of the training program.

The NPTC is capable of training up to 200 health care workers a week.

OTHER NEWS

In other efforts to stop the spread of Ebola, Soldiers of the 2nd General Support Aviation Battalion, 501st Aviation Regiment, 1st Combat Aviation Brigade, 1st Armored Division, Fort Bliss, Texas, arrived at Roberts International Airport, Monrovia, with their UH-60L Black Hawk helicopters, Oct. 30.

The Task Force Iron Knight aviators will support the U.S. Agency for International Development effort to contain the Ebola virus disease in Liberia.

Related Links:

Army News Service

Army.mil: Humanitarian Relief -- Medical

Army.mil: Africa News