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Team Travis conducts first Indo-Pacific aeromedical evacuation mission for COVID-19
U.S. Air Force Airmen with the 60th Aerospace Medicine Squadron back up a high deck patient loading platform to a C-17 Globemaster III for an incoming COVID-19-positive patient July 17, 2020 at Travis Air Force Base, California. Travis Airmen transported the patient from the Indo-Pacific Command area of responsibility as part of the Air Force’s response to the COVID-19 outbreak. This transport marked the Air Force’s first TIS mission into the INDOPACOM AOR and the 18th time employing TIS units to transport COVID-19 positive passengers. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Cameron Otte)
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Team Travis conducts first Indo-Pacific aeromedical evacuation mission for COVID-19
A C-17 Globemaster III with a COVID-19-positive patient onboard is parked on the flight line at Travis Air Force Base, California, July 17, 2020. Travis Airmen transported the patient from the Indo-Pacific Command area of responsibility as part of the Air Force’s response to the COVID-19 outbreak. This transport marked the Air Force’s first TIS mission into the INDOPACOM AOR and the 18th time employing TIS units to transport COVID-19 positive passengers. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Cameron Otte)
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Travis AFB spouse creates face masks for people with disabilities
Tracy Obanion says “I love you” in American Sign Language while wearing a face mask with a window. Danielle Lee Loera, the spouse of a technical sergeant stationed at Travis Air Force Base, California, designed and sewed the mask. Obanion, who is deaf, said the mask has helped her read lips and improved nonverbal communication. (Courtesy photo)
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Travis AFB spouse creates face masks for people with disabilities
Masks with windows sit on display recently on a table in base housing at Travis Air Force Base, California. Danielle Lee Loera, the spouse of a technical sergeant at Travis, has made more than 900 masks for members of Team Travis and the surrounding communities since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. (Courtesy photo)
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Travis AFB spouse creates face masks for people with disabilities
Danielle Lee Loera sits at her sewing machine recently at Travis Air Force Base, California. Loera designed and created a mask with a window to boost inclusiveness, allowing people to read lips and see facial expressions. (Courtesy photo)
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Travis AFB spouse creates face masks for people with disabilities
Danielle Lee Loera wears a face mask with a window that she designed recently at Travis Air Force Base, California. Loera went to a high school with students who dealt with hearing loss, inspiring her to design and produce masks that allow for lip reading and visible facial expressions. (Courtesy photo)
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Travis AFB spouse creates face masks for people with disabilities
Danielle Lee Loera sits at her sewing machine recently at Travis Air Force Base, California. Loera, who runs a bow business, has pivoted to mask-making due to the coronavirus pandemic. She has made more than 900 face coverings, including masks with a window over the face that allows people to read lips and see facial expressions. (Courtesy photo)
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Innovation keeps frontline medics better protected from COVID-19
U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. James Martin, right, 60th Medical Group emergency department shift leader, explains the capabilities of an intubation protection box May 14, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. The box is a transparent physical barrier that helps limit airborne pathogens to the confines of the box, protecting medical providers performing intubations. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Jonathon Carnell)
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Innovation keeps frontline medics better protected from COVID-19
U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. James Martin, right, 60th Medical Group emergency department shift leader, explains the capabilities of an intubation protection box May 14, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. The box is a transparent physical barrier that helps limit airborne pathogens to the confines of the box, protecting medical providers performing intubations. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Jonathon Carnell)
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Innovation keeps frontline medics better protected from COVID-19
U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. James Martin, left, 60th Medical Group emergency department shift leader, explains the capabilities of the isolation pod to Airman 1st Class Jaheem Prioleau, center, 60th MDG emergency department technician, and Staff Sgt. Casey Cross, 60th MDG ED paramedic, while inside an ambulance April 28, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. The pod provides protection for first responders because it serves as a barrier between them and infected patients, and it keeps pathogens, like those that cause COVID-19 and other infectious diseases, that patients may carry within it. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Jonathon Carnell)
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Innovation keeps frontline medics better protected from COVID-19
U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. James Martin, left, 60th Medical Group emergency department shift leader, explains the capabilities of the isolation pod to Airman 1st Class Jaheem Prioleau, center, 60th MDG emergency department technician, and Staff Sgt. Casey Cross, 60th MDG emergency department paramedic, April 28, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. The pod provides protection for first responders because it serves as a barrier between them and infected patients, and it keeps pathogens, like those that cause COVID-19 and other infectious diseases, that patients may carry within it. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Jonathon Carnell)
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Innovation keeps frontline medics better protected from COVID-19
.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. James Martin, center, 60th Medical Group emergency department shift leader, describes the capabilities of an intubation protection box to Ariel Roman, right, 60th MDG emergency department paramedic, and to Airman 1st Class Jaheem Prioleau 60th MDG emergency department technician, May 14, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California The box is a transparent physical barrier that helps limit airborne pathogens to the confines of the box, protecting medical providers performing intubations. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Jonathon Carnell)
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APS,860th AMXS Load TIS
Vernon Kennedy, 60th Aerial Port Squadron loading supervisor, secures a Transport Isolation System capsule onto the deck of a Tunner 60K loader May 9, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. Travis AFB has a C-17 loaded with a TIS capsule on alert status to ensure the aircraft is ready to launch at a moment’s notice. The TIS unit allows the transport of individuals with highly contagious diseases without infecting other passengers or aircrew on the aircraft. (U.S. Air Force photo by Heide Couch)
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APS,860th AMXS Load TIS
U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Tanner Broshears, 60th Aerial Port Squadron ramp operations journeyman, secures a Transport Isolation System capsule onto the deck of a Tunner 60K loader May 9, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. Travis AFB has a C-17 loaded with a TIS capsule on alert status to ensure the aircraft is ready to launch at a moment’s notice. The TIS unit allows the transport of individuals with highly contagious diseases without infecting other passengers or aircrew on the aircraft. (U.S. Air Force photo by Heide Couch)
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APS,860th AMXS Load TIS
Personnel from the 60th Aerial Port Squadron and medical personnel from the COVID West Aeromedical Evacuation Task Force unload a Transport Isolation System capsule from the cargo bay of a C-17 Globemaster III May 9, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. Travis AFB has a C-17 loaded with a TIS capsule on alert status to ensure the aircraft is ready to launch at a moment’s notice. The TIS unit allows the transport of individuals with highly contagious diseases without infecting other passengers or aircrew on the aircraft. (U.S. Air Force photo by Heide Couch)
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APS,860th AMXS Load TIS
U.S. Air Force personnel from the 21st Airlift Squadron and 60th Aerial Port Squadron unload a Transport Isolation System capsule from the cargo bay of a C-17 Globemaster III May 9, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. Travis AFB has a C-17 loaded with a TIS capsule on alert status to ensure the aircraft is ready to launch at a moment’s notice. The TIS unit allows the transport of individuals with highly contagious diseases without infecting other passengers or aircrew on the aircraft. (U.S. Air Force photo by Heide Couch)
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APS,860th AMXS Load TIS
U.S. Air Force Capt. David Miller, 60th Aerial Port Squadron operations officer, secures a pallet containing support equipment for two Transport Isolation System capsules in the cargo bay of a C-17 Globemaster III May 9, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. Travis AFB has a C-17 loaded with a TIS capsule on alert status to ensure the aircraft is ready to launch at a moment’s notice. The TIS unit allows the transport of individuals with highly contagious diseases without infecting other passengers or aircrew on the aircraft. (U.S. Air Force photo by Heide Couch)
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APS,860th AMXS Load TIS
Personnel from the 60th Aerial Port Squadron and medical personnel from the COVID West Aeromedical Evacuation Task Force secure a Transport Isolation System capsule in the cargo bay of a C-17 Globemaster III May 9, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. Travis AFB has a C-17 loaded with a TIS capsule on alert status to ensure the aircraft is ready to launch at a moment’s notice. The TIS unit allows the transport of individuals with highly contagious diseases without infecting other passengers or aircrew on the aircraft. (U.S. Air Force photo by Heide Couch)
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APS,860th AMXS Load TIS
Ramon Duenas, 60th Aerial Port Squadron expediter load director, helps push a Transport Isolation System capsule into the cargo bay of a C-17 Globemaster III May 9, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. Travis AFB has a C-17 loaded with a TIS capsule on alert status to ensure the aircraft is ready to launch at a moment’s notice. The TIS unit allows the transport of individuals with highly contagious diseases without infecting other passengers or aircrew on the aircraft. (U.S. Air Force photo by Heide Couch)
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APS,860th AMXS Load TIS
Personnel from the 60th Aerial Port Squadron transfer a Transport Isolation System capsule from a Tunner 60K loader into the cargo bay of a C-17 Globemaster III May 9, 2020, at Travis Air Force Base, California. The C-17, C-130H Hercules and C-130J Super Hercules are the only aircraft capable of carrying TIS capsules, which the DOD initially engineered in response to the Ebola virus in 2014. The capsules allow the transport of individuals with highly contagious diseases without infecting any other passengers or aircrew on the aircraft. (U.S. Air Force photo by Heide Couch)
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