From Military.com:
“Military Life Everything You
Need to Know About the Navy's Hospital Ships”
The USNS Comfort and the USNS
Mercy are rushing to complete their scheduled maintenance and board teams of
medical personnel. Once outfitted, the Comfort will sail to New York Harbor,
and the Mercy will head off to the Port of Los Angeles. Despite being ordered
to prepare, there isn’t a realistic timeline for the ships' departure just yet,
as they were both undergoing routine maintenance and repairs when the outbreak
began. Comfort and Mercy are by no means a silver bullet solution to the
growing outbreak. In fact, they won't be handling anyone infected by the
coronavirus, known as COVID-19, at all. Instead, the ships will treat other
cases to take pressure off hospitals dealing with infected patients.
Using the Comfort and Mercy for
Coronavirus Response: The sister ships
are the third-largest vessels in the Navy, surpassed only by Nimitz-class and
Ford-class aircraft carriers. Mercy began her life as a San Clemente-class oil
tanker called SS Worth and was converted to a hospital ship in the mid-1980s.
The Comfort is also a converted oil tanker, once known as the SS Rose City. Both
Comfort and Mercy are essentially floating hospitals, each with a 1,000-bed
capacity and complete with anything you'd find in a normal hospital, including
blood banks, morgues and oxygen-production plants. The ships are designed to
specialize in trauma cases, given their mission is to treat wounded troops.
They are not designed to handle an infectious disease outbreak for many
reasons. The ships have no way of isolating infectious patients; that's why
they will deploy to support only non-COVID-19 cases. Further complicating their
support of the outbreak, some of the patient beds aboard are actually stacked
atop one another. The berthing beds for the crew are stacked three deep, and
the ship uses metal handrails -- on which coronavirus can survive for hours. Some
question whether the ships should be used at all. It wouldn’t be the first time
a hospital ship was less than helpful. Witnesses say the Mercy actually hit the
USS Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor while sailing “dangerously close” to it.
Deploying the Comfort and Mercy: What is unique about the two ships are the
laws surrounding their status as non-combatants. They do carry weapons, but
only defensive armaments, and they can't transport members of the Navy who hold
combat specialties, such as naval aviators, special operations troops or
submarine or surface warfare officers. Marine Corps personnel are also not
stationed aboard the ships. As a result, they're most often crewed by civilians
from the Military Sealift Command. Firing on the Comfort or the Mercy would be
a war crime under the Geneva Conventions. The ships are in a reduced operating
status in their home ports. Fewer than 75 crewmembers are aboard while the
Mercy is at home in San Diego and the Comfort is docked at Naval Station
Norfolk, Virginia. Once activated, the ships are usually ready to be underway
within five days, taking on a crew of about 60 civilian mariners and more than
1,200 military medical personnel. The biggest problem with staffing the
hospital crews during the coronavirus response is that many of them are
civilian reservists, and activating those specialties would remove them from
the civilian population.
Past Uses of the Comfort and
Mercy: Both Comfort and Mercy have seen
their share of action. They both deployed in support of Operations Desert
Shield and Desert Storm. Mercy, which operates primarily in the Pacific,
deploys routinely for training exercises and in response to humanitarian
disasters. Comfort historically sees a lot more action. It was deployed to
support Operation Uphold Democracy, a U.S. military intervention in Haiti in
1992, and later supported the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. Comfort also
supports training and humanitarian exercises. This will not be the first time
the ships have deployed inside the United States. Comfort responded to the 9/11
attacks, deploying to New York City to assist hospitals there. It also sailed
for New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and to Puerto Rico
following Hurricane Maria.
^ Hopefully these ships will continue
to work hard (as they always do) to help those sick and in need. ^
https://www.military.com/military-life/everything-you-need-know-about-navys-hospital-ships.html
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