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2x Articles about female medics in Afghanistan

Armymedic

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Two good articles about medics currently in Afghanistan.
The first about MCpl Angie Townsend, who is a company medic:

http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=6a4abfac-3ffb-45cb-b7e3-46fc6fa1bdd4&k=76269
Canadian women pull their own weight in Afghanistan's danger zones
 
Sue Bailey
Canadian Press


Sunday, November 12, 2006



Medic Angela Townsend is shown by an armoured ambulance vehicle on Oct. 13, 2006 in the volatile Panjwaii district of southern Afghanistan. Townsend is one of few Canadian women doing every job from supply to front-line infantry in Afghanistan. (CP/Sue Bailey)

PANJWAII, Afghanistan (CP) - Medic Angela Townsend erupts into her trademark laugh when asked about the most unusual gift she has received from well-wishers back in Canada.

"I got a package of 30 Freezies and it's 42 degrees here I think," she said. "So I'm going to have to save those for a rainy day.

"If I get to freeze them somewhere, I'll be able to share them with all the guys here."

Townsend, 31, was stationed during a recent interview at a dusty military outpost surrounded by sun-bleached mountains of rock and sand. The other-worldly scene conjures images from Mad Max movies.

Canadians are dug into the former Taliban heartland here, holding crucial ground won during bloody battles last summer.

Cool water is a luxury, let alone anything frozen.

But Townsend is clearly touched that someone cared enough to try sending a bit of relief from the searing daytime heat.

The Cape Breton native is one of few Canadian women doing every job from medic to front-line infantry in Afghanistan.

Women make up about 15 per cent of the Canadian Forces but only around seven per cent of the 2,400 soldiers deployed here. Troops are serving six-month tours that will continue through 2008.

There are now almost 8,000 women in Canada's military and another 4,800 with reserve units.

Townsend says she's treated much like any other soldier.

"I find if you portray yourself as someone who can do the job, and you put in the effort to help them out as well, you'll gain the respect from the guys."

Women are equally expected to unload heavy deliveries of food and water, and to fill and haul the endless sandbags needed to fortify positions against insurgent attacks.

Townsend joined the military full time because she liked the people she met. It also seemed like a good way to see the world.

"The relationships you form are relationships you'll have forever," she said. "Just the experiences, telling people about what you've done, what you've seen. It's amazing."

Townsend has completed missions in Bosnia and with the Disaster Assistance Response Team, or DART, in Sri Lanka and Turkey. This is her first tour in Afghanistan.

By far, the hardest part is leaving family and friends.

"It's a sacrifice," she said. "I wonder sometimes how some people do it with children, being married. I applaud them so much."

The support of people back home helps more than Townsend can say.

"Sometimes it's overwhelming because you don't really realize how much and how many people are actually back there praying for you and wishing you well."

As a medic, Townsend was attached to A Company, 2nd Battalion of Princess Patricia's Light Infantry based in Shilo, Man.

Sgt.-Maj. John Hooyer said gender makes no difference to him as long as every soldier is there to work and be part of the team.

"Each one of them brings their own personality. So it's the personality that's going to allow them to integrate smoothly, or they may have difficulties from time to time."

The presence of women, however, does change the dynamic in some ways, he said.

"Honestly? The nice part about it is, when you talk to (male) soldiers you normally talk about work. When you have a woman here, you talk about things that you like back home. You talk about your family, you talk about your children.

"You talk about something that brings a level of normalcy back to your life while you're sitting here working on a defensive position or you're waiting to go out on an (observation post) or on patrol. That's the nice side of it."

© The Canadian Press 2006
And the second about Shannon Fretter, who is a medic on a bison amb crew.

http://thechronicleherald.ca/World/543271.html

Nova Scotia’s hardcore medic
Springhill’s Fretter brings both giggles, toughness to posting duty in Panjwaii
By BILL GRAVELAND The Canadian Press

PANJWAII, Afghanistan — Don’t let the blond hair, blue eyes and dazzling white smile fool you. Cpl. Shannon Fretter of Springhill is as hardcore as any grizzled fighting man in the Canadian Forces.

Fretter, a medic who has been stationed with troops during the heaviest fighting in Panjwaii district, was on her way to Kandahar Air Field on Friday for a couple of days of downtime.

"I just want to smell like a girl again," she lamented, pulling at a strand of hair sticking out from beneath her toque.

Fretter, 32, is a mother of five and has a husband waiting at home in Petawawa, Ont. She has become a popular subject for members of the Afghan National Army, who are forever begging her to pose for pictures with them.

"It’s the blond hair and blue eyes. They don’t get to see it that much here. The boys keep teasing me that they’re lining the grape huts with my picture just like they do with their porn for their vehicles," she giggled.

"They think it’s cool that I have a gun and I stand there with my rifle and do action poses. I’ve had at least 200 photos so I’m a pinup girl for the Canadian army," Fretter said.

But look behind the aesthetics and you find someone who has been in the heat of action and watched close friends die.

"I’ve never hated anyone in my life until my buddies started dying and there’s nothing in the world that can bring them back," Fretter said thoughtfully. But the words sound little like those of a medic.

"There is the satisfaction that these people are not going to be able to do it again. We’re pushing them back as far as we can every time we get a chance to go out there. The Americans call it hunting," she added. "I look at it this way — the more we get of them the less they get of their own people."

Fretter was providing aid and support the day a suicide bomber on a bicycle killed four Canadian soldiers. It was her first time dealing with mass casualties.

"They’re killing their own people. I mean there was two little girls that got blown up for no apparent reason other than the fact they want to hurt us and that is wrong," she said.

There’s another conundrum facing medical staff working in "kill zones" like the one in Panjwaii district, west of Kandahar Air Field. It involves having to give medical attention to the enemy in some cases.

Fretter has treated her share of enemy combatants, but she said it’s not something she likes doing.

"It’s just the fact we know these are the people who are the ones killing you off. We treat them because we have to but there’s not one person who will say that they want to."

The only time Fretter has been injured was when she was taking care of a soldier from the Afghan National Army who had been injured in by an improvised explosive device, or IED. His unit was ambushed shortly after.

"He started having seizures and he started beating the living crap out of me. I went to give him some morphine and the auto injector was loaded backwards so the needle went right through my finger and he has just vomited blood all over my hands," she said.

"It was a needle prick so I got evacuated 24 hours later and started some HIV treatment but it came back and was negative so that’s all that counts."

Fretter spent some time visiting with fellow medic Pte. Melissa Wiseman of Clarenville, N.L. on the brief stopover at the camp. Wiseman, who turns 26 on Sunday, hasn’t seen the same sort of action has her colleague.

"We haven’t had any Canadian casualties — only civilian casualties," Wiseman said. "It’s kind of a rush when it happens."

Recalling the major anti-Taliban offensive Canadian troops launched in September, she added: "We were out on (Operation) Medusa and we were there for all of it but with the Bison (troop carrier) you’re kind of out of it behind the front line. You kind of hear it all but that’s about all."

As for treating the enemies for wounds — Wiseman said it’s just something you have to do. "We had one. But when it came back he was just a civilian fighter so I guess he wasn’t Taliban. But you do what you can. They’re still people and you still have to help them even if they’re Taliban," she added

Now seeing how both women are from NS, I have to disagree with Mr Graveland's assessment. My personal opinion is Angela is MUCH harder than Shannon in the military context (mother of 5 though, does trump everyone including me, on the home front). Stating that, both are very competant medics, and worthy of the recognition.
 
Angie is one heck of a medic! and always smiling, never has a bad word to say and just generally keeps morale high just by hanging out and chatting. I have yet to meet a soldier that didn't want Angie as a medic.

Did I mention I believe 2 time participant in the Ironman?  Now that's fit!
 
HitorMiss said:
Did I mention I believe 2 time participant in the Ironman?  Now that's fit!

I didn't, but you may. I believe she's done two, and missed the last one due to operations.
 
Honestly in my experience Best female medic heck might be the best medic I have ever had the pleasure to work with...course Somerset might be the best but I am biased with him LOL
 
HitorMiss said:
best medic I have ever had the pleasure to work with...

Thanks for the qualifier...someday we may work together.  ;D
 
With you sure...On me, I hope not cause then I forgot to duck again!
 
I know them both from 2 Fd Amb.  They are both good medics. Yes, Angie did the Ironman a couple of times and always with that smile (or was it a grimace?) on her face!!!
I have to admit that some of Fretter's comments are not exactly what I want to hear from someone being praised as a "woman doing a man's job."  Not to mention her remarks about treating the enemy.  I'm sure everyone feels that way but I wouldn't have made the comment public.
 
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