This past
Saturday, May 4, a dramatic rescue mission unfolded over the vast expanse of
the Atlantic Ocean as a critical patient aboard a Carnival cruise ship received
urgent medical assistance from an elite US Air Force team.
The Carnival
Venezia was en route back to its origin port in New York City after having
visited multiple eastern Caribbean islands and the lines private island in The
Bahamas, Half Moon Cay. When the medical emergency arose, it was still roughly 350 nautical miles away
from the U.S. mainland.?
With the
passenger's condition deteriorating, the 920th Rescue Wing sprang into action
from Patrick Space Force Base in Florida. the rescue operation involved two
HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopters, two HC-130J Combat King II aircraft, and two
teams of skilled combat rescue officers and pararescuemen, according to a news
release from the 920th Rescue Wing.?
To traverse the
vast distance, the 920th Rescue Wing employed three helicopter air-to-air
refuelings (HAAR), a complex maneuver, which involves connecting a probe from
the helicopter to a drogue on the HC-130J aircraft, allowing fuel transfer
mid-flight.?
Carnival Cruise Line
told CNN
that it coordinated with both the U.S. Air Force and Coast Guard to modify Venezias
course so that it could most efficiently meet up with the medical helicopters.
This tricky
procedure ensured that the rescue teams had the necessary fuel to reach the
cruise ship swiftly. Even so, the mission took a grueling eight hours, with the
round-trip flight spanning more than 1,200 miles of treacherous open ocean.?
Upon reaching Carnival
Venezias position, rescuers wasted no time in descending from the helicopters
to prepare the patient for evacuation. Amidst the roaring winds and rolling
waves, the patient and his mother were carefully hoisted up into the
helicopter, where he received immediate medical attention during the flight to
a mainland medical center.
Everyone in the
wing mobilized with exceptional speed. By uniting our efforts, we saved crucial
time, delivering life-saving assistance six hours ahead of other response teams,
said Capt. Dylan Gann, 301st Rescue Squadron pilot. Our collective
determination and efficiency ensured the successful rescue and transport of the
individual in need.?
The patient in
question has not been publicly named, nor has the particular affliction from
which they were suffering been disclosed. Neither Carnival Cruise Line nor the 920th?Rescue
Wing had any further information to offer as to which hospital the patient was
taken to or his present condition.
Following the
successful medical airlift operation, Carnival Venezia continued on to New York
City, arriving on Monday as originally scheduled.?
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