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Thursday September 2nd 2010

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Medic Treats Himself After Being Shot by Sniper

Spc. Matthew Mortensen (center) of Olathe, Kan., a combat medic with 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, shows high spirits, with Pfc. Juan Ortega (left) of Belen, N.M., and Pfc. Jorge Cruz of Waterbury, Conn., after he was shot in the shoulder by sniper fire while on a presence patrol in Baghdad, Dec. 10. Mortensen was sent back to the United States for rehabilitation and recuperation and anticipates returning to his platoon in Iraq in February. (U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Ryan Nolan, 2nd BCT, 10th Mtn. Div.)

Spc. Matthew Mortensen (cen­ter) of Olathe, Kan., a com­bat medic with 2nd Brigade Com­bat Team, 10th Moun­tain Divi­sion, shows high spir­its, with Pfc. Juan Ortega (left) of Belen, N.M., and Pfc. Jorge Cruz of Water­bury, Conn., after he was shot in the shoul­der by sniper fire while on a pres­ence patrol in Bagh­dad, Dec. 10. Mortensen was sent back to the United States for reha­bil­i­ta­tion and recu­per­a­tion and antic­i­pates return­ing to his pla­toon in Iraq in Feb­ru­ary. (U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Ryan Nolan, 2nd BCT, 10th Mtn. Div.)

"I was prob­a­bly two feet from my door of my truck when I heard gun fire and it felt like some­one just cracked me in the right shoul­der blade with a ham­mer," said Spc. Matthew Mortensen of Olathe, Kan.

The com­bat medic with 2nd Brigade Com­bat Team, 10th Moun­tain Divi­sion, was part of a pres­ence patrol con­duct­ing a neigh­bor­hood search, Dec. 10, in an area his­tor­i­cally known for weapons caches, rock­ets and mortars.

As the patrol walked the streets, a mounted ele­ment went from check point to check point pro­vid­ing secu­rity for them. Hav­ing reached the last check point, Staff Sgt. Manoj Prasad of Water­town, N.Y., and Mortensen dis­mounted to maneu­ver the trucks into a sta­tic secu­rity pos­ture, when shots were fired.

"I saw a bul­let hole in his shirt, and when I cut it open all I could see was blood," said Prasad. "I looked for an exit wound and couldn't find one."

Being the medic on scene, Mortensen pro­vided first aid care to him­self after he was injured until he reached the Joint Secu­rity Sta­tion Loy­alty aid sta­tion. Com­bat medics are respon­si­ble for pro­vid­ing first aid and front­line trauma care on the bat­tle­field with the pri­mary role to pro­vide med­ical treat­ment to wounded soldiers.

"After I was shot, I had my pla­toon sergeant exam­ine for a wound and he found one on my right shoul­der blade," said Mortensen. "Then I jumped into the truck, threw off my kit because I couldn't reach my right side with my kit on. After I took it off, I started clean­ing up some of the blood with gauze then I used the pack­age for the gauze and cre­ated a pres­sure dress­ing over the wound just in case it pen­e­trated my chest cav­ity. I didn't know what hap­pened to the bul­let so that was the only thing I was really wor­ried about"

After the ini­tial treat­ment, Mortensen was med­ically evac­u­ated to another JSS. Mortensen kept his com­po­sure through­out the event and was able to pro­vide Prasad with the proper mede­vac pro­ce­dures for enter­ing the JSS.

The day fol­low­ing the inci­dent, Mortensen was awarded a Pur­ple Heart and a Com­bat Med­ical badge while he was in the hos­pi­tal at Vic­tory Base Complex.

The Pur­ple Heart is awarded to those who have been wounded or killed while serv­ing on or after April 5, 1917 with the U.S. mil­i­tary. The Com­bat Med­ical Badge is a dec­o­ra­tion of the United States Army which was first cre­ated in Jan­u­ary 1945. The badge is awarded to any mem­ber of the Army Med­ical Depart­ment, pay grade colonel or below, who are assigned or attached to a med­ical unit (com­pany or smaller size) which pro­vides med­ical sup­port to a ground com­bat arms unit dur­ing any period in which the unit was engaged in active ground combat.

Mortensen was sent back to the United States for reha­bil­i­ta­tion and recu­per­a­tion. After spend­ing a month back in the States, he antic­i­pates he will return to his pla­toon in Iraq some­time in February.

DVIDS
Story by Sgt. Jen­nie Burrett

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