In a display of coordinated emergency response, the Dominican Republic Air Force has pulled off a high-stakes aeromedical evacuation in the rugged terrain near Pico Duarte, successfully extracting two tourists facing life-threatening medical emergencies. The mission was not a solo effort: air force units worked in lockstep with the national Emergency Operations Center and the Directorate of Out-of-Hospital Emergency Services, turning separate institutional capabilities into a unified, effective response that underscores the country’s investment in inter-agency emergency preparedness.
The rescue operation was launched from a UH1H 3074 military aircraft, with a carefully assembled four-person crew leading the risky mission. At the helm were Captain Pilot Juan Vásquez Ávila and First Lieutenant Pilot Martín Soto Quezada, who navigated the unforgiving mountain topography to reach the stranded tourists. They were backed by Aviation Technical Sergeant Yesther Ciprian Paredes, who managed critical aircraft systems throughout the flight, and aeromedic Second Lieutenant Thomas Camacho Moronta, who provided on-site urgent care to stabilize the injured patients before extraction. Working against challenging geographic conditions that demand extreme precision, the team completed the extraction without further incident, getting the two tourists to care far faster than a ground evacuation could have achieved.
Once extracted, the patients were flown directly to Professor Juan Bosch Regional Traumatological and Surgical Hospital, a leading facility equipped to handle complex trauma and urgent surgical care, where they immediately began receiving specialized treatment from experienced medical teams. Beyond the successful rescue of two individuals, the operation serves as a public demonstration of the Dominican Republic Air Force’s constant operational readiness. It proves the branch can deploy rapidly and effectively to respond to crises across every region of the country, even in the most hard-to-reach landscapes, protecting both residents and visitors through coordinated, quick action.
