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Marines

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Service members load a U.S. Army UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter with gear and supplies in support of Innovative Readiness Training Arctic Care 2018, as they prepare to depart Kotzebue, Alaska, and travel to outlying villages, April 14, 2018. Service members in support of IRT Arctic Care will conduct critical mission training and logistical movements in order to simulate military/civilian humanitarian operations and health care delivery in time of crisis, conflict or disaster. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Ricardo Davila)

Photo by Lance Cpl. Ricardo Davila

Combating the cold: IRT Arctic Care 2018 kicks off

16 Apr 2018 | U.S. Marine Corps Forces Reserve

Deep within the Northwest Arctic Borough, where snow and ice blanket the surface and winds send piercing chills through the body, service members gather in Kotzebue, Alaska, for the kick off of Innovative Readiness Training Arctic Care 2018.

Innovative Readiness Training is a Department of Defense sponsored program that aims to produce mission-ready forces through military training opportunities that provide key services for underserved communities throughout the United States.

“Innovative Readiness Training is a very unique training program where our primary mission is to train service members through real world situations,” said Maj. Lisbeth M. Andriessen, the IRT program manager for Marine Forces Reserve. “A lot of the missions we conduct take place in austere conditions in extremely remote communities of the United States. It’s a great program because the service members get the training and the community gets the byproduct of having these services brought to them.”

From April 13-27, service members from the Marine Corps Reserve, Navy Reserve, Air National Guard, Air Force Reserve, Army Reserve, Alaska Army National Guard, Coast Guard and Canadian Forces will be deployed to provide medical, dental, optometry and veterinary care to 12 remote villages throughout the Northwest Arctic Borough.

For this iteration of IRT Arctic Care, Marine Forces Reserve is the lead service. Personnel from 4th Dental Battalion and 4th Medical Battalion, 4th Marine Logistics Group, will be coordinating and conducting critical mission training and logistical movements with the other military branches in order to simulate military/civilian humanitarian operations and health care delivery in time of crisis, conflict, or disaster.

“The lead service is chosen based off the needs of the mission and the personnel requested,” said Air Force Capt. Laura B. Delgado, assistant officer in charge of IRT Arctic Care 2018, 176th Medical Group, Alaska Air National Guard. “The communities we are training in don’t have access to health care services that more heavily populated areas have. With Marine Forces Reserve taking the lead, the different military branches will be learning from each other and working together to enhance their skills, while providing specialty services to the local villages.”

One of the key goals of the IRT program is to strengthen and build new partnerships with culturally complex populations, including remote areas. By conducting hands-on training to service members, IRT Arctic Care aims to meet this goal by providing direct and lasting benefits to residents of each village served.

“A lot of service members will come out of an IRT and say ‘I joined the service to help my community and this is one place where I had the opportunity to do that,’” Andriessen said. “When they have community members coming up to them, shaking their hands and thanking them for their hard work, it really strengthens the bond between the civilians and the military.”

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