Annie Zak
Airmen rescued a man who
suffered “significant injuries” in a bear attack Monday west of the Interior
community of Galena, a spokesman for the Alaska National Guard said.
Few details
were available by Monday evening. The National Guard had not identified the
victim, described the extent of his injuries, or said what kind of bear was
involved. The rescue happened 75 miles west of Galena, said David Bedard,
spokesman for the Guard’s 176th wing.
“A hunting
partner stayed with the victim and was in contact with a Good Samaritan pilot
flying overhead,” the Guard said in a statement released Monday.
The Alaska Rescue Coordination
Center sent a Pave Hawk helicopter and an HC-130J on the rescue mission, the
Guard said.
A two-person
rescue team parachuted from the HC-130 and then “hiked to the location of the
injured individual, where they provided life-saving care,” according to the
agency’s statement. The aircraft also transported blood that was
“critical" to the patient’s survival, the Guard said.
The helicopter
picked up the victim and the rescue team, and the victim was later transported
to Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage.
(The
Guard sent a C-130J and a Pave Hawk. That is some serious care.)
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