‘Charlie Med’ keeps Soldiers, civilians in the fight

By Capt. Bryant Wine | Georgia National GuardNovember 24, 2020

‘Charlie Med’ keeps Soldiers, civilians in the fight
1 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – U.S. Army Spc. Murphy Alexander, a combat medic assigned to the Macon-based Charlie Company, 148th Brigade Support Battalion, 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Georgia Army National Guard, administers a flu vaccination to a Soldier during drill weekend, Nov. 14, 2020, at the unit’s armory in Macon, Georgia. Preventative medical care, like flu shots, ensure the brigade is medically fit and ready to respond to any mission. (Photo Credit: Capt. Bryant Wine) VIEW ORIGINAL
‘Charlie Med’ keeps Soldiers, civilians in the fight
2 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – U.S. Army Cpl. Lauren Mangee, a combat medic assigned to the Macon-based Charlie Company, 148th Brigade Support Battalion, 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Georgia Army National Guard, prepares a Soldier for a flu vaccine during drill weekend, Nov. 14, 2020, at the unit’s armory in Macon, Georgia. Preventative medical care not only ensures unit readiness but also promotes the health and welfare of Soldiers. (Photo Credit: Capt. Bryant Wine) VIEW ORIGINAL
20130921-Z-QM033-002:GEORGIA GARRISON TRAINING CENTER, Fort Stewart, Ga.— After finding her severally dehydrated patient’s vein, Staff Sgt. Rebecca Pollock, medic with Charlie Company, 148th Brigade Support Battalion, holds the IV while taping it down in place to secure it. “It is important to ensure that we tape it in place and that the patient doesn’t move around too much,” explains Pollock. “When you stick someone, the needle only penetrates the skin and vein. Once in, we slip it out and there is only a tube left in there. So if the patient moves around too much, it could pull that tube out and then we have to re-stick.”
3 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – 20130921-Z-QM033-002:GEORGIA GARRISON TRAINING CENTER, Fort Stewart, Ga.— After finding her severally dehydrated patient’s vein, Staff Sgt. Rebecca Pollock, medic with Charlie Company, 148th Brigade Support Battalion, holds the IV while taping it down in place to secure it. “It is important to ensure that we tape it in place and that the patient doesn’t move around too much,” explains Pollock. “When you stick someone, the needle only penetrates the skin and vein. Once in, we slip it out and there is only a tube left in there. So if the patient moves around too much, it could pull that tube out and then we have to re-stick.” (Photo Credit: Army Spc. Hannah Fulcher) VIEW ORIGINAL

MACON, Ga. – One company of only 100 Soldiers ensures the health of a force of over 4,000 within the Georgia Army National Guard. Affectionately known as "Charlie Med," the Charlie Company, 148th Brigade Support Battalion, safeguards the medical readiness and care for the entire 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (BCT).

"We're a brigade asset. We provide them the medical force health protection function," said U.S. Army Capt. Alan Schmitz, commander of Charlie Company. "We ensure medical readiness of the brigade, like for flu shots this time of year. We do CLS (combat lifesaver) training, medic recertification and refresher courses for the brigade."

Under the Army's modular BCT system, every brigade combat team is assigned a company exclusively devoted to higher-level medical care and readiness. These medical companies are always designated as Company C of the brigade support battalion.

While every battalion in a BCT possesses its own medics and physician assistants, Charlie Company houses the personnel and equipment necessary for elevated treatment.

"We have an increased capability of surgical assets, as well as patient hold," said Schmitz. "We also have X-ray capabilities, pharmacy, and a lab."

Charlie Med's capabilities also include a preventative medicine section, mental health section and a brigade medical supply section. Due to the specialized personnel and skill sets, the medical company is authorized a major as company commander, unlike other companies in a brigade combat team under a captain's command.

Charlie Med operates the "Role II" care center for the brigade, which serves as an intermediary between the various battalion aid stations and larger medical treatment facilities and hospitals. Here, Charlie Company medical specialists monitor communications for "nine-line" medical evacuation requests and can receive patients by ground and air. Orthopedic surgeons, physical therapists and lab technicians, organic to the company, treat patients from the brigade in ways battalions in the field would have greater difficulty or cannot.

During both peace and war, Charlie Company has ensured the medical readiness of the Georgia Army National Guard's largest brigade while helping Soldiers and units bounce back from injury and sickness. Charlie Med has supported the 48th IBCT in deployments to Iraq in 2005 and Afghanistan in 2009 and 2019.

When not deployed, the company maintains the 48th IBCT's overall medical readiness and trains for its next mission, whether at home or abroad. Numerous Soldiers from Charlie Company were activated in response to COVID-19 and assisted medical professionals in hospitals across Georgia treating civilians who contracted the disease.

Recent deployment experience has made Charlie Med Soldiers skilled in providing quick and quality medical treatment to any person under their care.

"We're able to meet that golden hour and platinum 30 minutes from the point of injury to medical intervention," said Schmitz. "We're more closely located to the fight so we can intervene on an injury or a casualty much quicker to help return that patient back to the fight."

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