Ohio National Guard News

 

School can wait, Puerto Rico cannot: Ohio Guard members postpone college pursuits to serve their fellow Americans

By 1st Lt. Dustin Lawson, Ohio National Guard Public Affairs
Photos by Sgt. Joanna Bradshaw, Ohio National Guard Public Affairs

Three Army health care specialists assigned to the 285th Medical Company (Area Support) prepare a triage station on a residential street Oct. 21, 2017, in Juana Diaz, Puerto Rico. Ohio National Guard medical personnel worked with the Disaster Medical Assistance Team (DMAT) to organize an outreach program to provide care to members of the community who couldn't travel to the aid station set up in Ponce. The Rapid Assessment Team (RAT) is staffed similarly to a civilian urgent care in the U.S., including doctors, pharmacists and other medical personnel.

Spc. Jacob Parker, a health care specialist with the Ohio Army National Guard, takes the vital signs of a patient at a temporary medical outreach station set up on a residential street Oct. 21, 2017, in Juana Diaz, Puerto Rico. Parker is part of a Rapid Assessment Team (RAT) that travels to members of the community who need medical attention but are unable to make it to a hospital or aid station due to road closures or lack of transportation following Hurricane Maria.

A citizen of Juana Diaz, Puerto Rico receives a wellness check from Spc. Jacob Parker, a health care specialist with the Ohio Army National Guard, at a mobile aid station Oct. 17, 2017. This outreach mission, called the Rapid Assessment Team (RAT), will continue as long as victims of Hurricane Maria need it, until local medical resources are up and running again.

Spc. Jacob Parker, a health care specialist with the Ohio Army National Guard, conducts medical triage by taking a patient's vitals in the Auditorio Juan Pachín Vicéns, a repurposed basketball stadium, Oct. 20, 2017, in Ponce, Puerto Rico. The medical center operates in similar fashion to an urgent care, where patients are triaged and assessed, receive prescriptions and medications, and then discharged.


SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — When a Soldier receives the order that they are being deployed to another country, they often have months to prepare. When a National Guard Soldier is called up to help with recovery efforts for a natural disaster, they usually only have days to prepare.

Joining the National Guard comes with the understanding that when a crisis hits the United States, a Soldier must be ready to quickly put life on hold to answer the call to help.

For many in school, that may mean taking a semester off from college that has already started. This is the case for at least three Soldiers serving with the 285th Medical Company (Area Support) who deployed to Puerto Rico Oct. 5, with about 35 others, and have been providing medical services to citizens in San Juan and surrounding cities.

“The opportunity to help others is more important to me than continuing classes right now,” said Spc. Jacob Parker, a health care specialist who also attends Hocking College in Nelsonville, Ohio, where he is working toward a degree in wildlife management. When he was given the option to go on the mission to Puerto Rico, Parker didn’t take long to make his decision, raising his hand to volunteer. “The same classes will be there in the spring; this opportunity to assist will not,” he said.

Pfc. Matthew Gamble, an ambulance aide attached to the 285th, is a 21-year-old junior majoring in exercise science at Youngstown State and said he eventually wants to work in the cardiac rehabilitation field. Gamble was a month and a half into the semester when he was given the option to join the mission. It took him only one day to decide to take the semester off. “The people in Puerto Rico need my help more than I need another semester of school,” Gamble said.

Pfc. Spencer Smith is a 19-year-old freshman studying public and leadership management at The Ohio State University in Columbus. Smith was only three weeks into his college career when the opportunity to go to Puerto Rico and the opportunity to help people presented itself.

“For me, the decision was easy, Ohio State wasn’t going anywhere,” said Smith said, a health care specialist with the 285th. “But, I wanted to help people. This is what I joined the National Guard for.”

Parker, Gamble and Smith all said their professors were understanding and said they would work with them if they wanted to stay enrolled for the semester. However, Parker and Gamble both decided to take the semester off so they could focus entirely on the mission without the worry of schoolwork lingering. Smith decided to balance his class work while serving in Puerto Rico, showcasing the unique strengths of an Ohio Citizen-Soldier.

Though they each said the decision to volunteer for the Puerto Rico mission was easy, some of the Soldiers still had concerns about leaving in the middle of a semester. Although, their lingering concerns were silenced one morning before leaving, when they were visited by Maj. Gen. John C. Harris Jr., the Ohio assistant adjutant general. Harris asked a group of 285th Soldiers who among them had dropped out of college for the semester to go on the mission. About 10 people raised their hands.

“When I saw the amount of people on this mission who raised their hands, when asked who took time off from school, I gained more respect for them. I felt less alone,” Smith said.

It is a sacrifice to take a semester off, but each of the Ohio National Guard Soldiers who volunteered to deploy in support of hurricane relief efforts put the mission first and said they consider their sacrifice to be minor in comparison to the importance of helping their fellow Americans in Puerto Rico — in their greatest time of need.

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