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Exercise Tests Large-Scale Patient Movement From Indo-Pacific Region

Exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025, involving about 1,000 military and civilian personnel, began July 21, 2025, and continued until today. 

Medical personnel treat a patient lying on a gurney on a tarmac with troops in camouflage uniforms looking on.
Exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025
Air Force 60th Operational Medical Readiness Squadron medical personnel report on a notional patient to the Reach 32 Air Medical Services team just before air transport to a local hospital for care during exercise Ultimate Caduceus, at Travis Air Force Base, Calif., July 28, 2025.
Credit: Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Anita Chebahtah
VIRIN: 250728-N-ZA692-1088

"The exercise created realistic crisis scenarios that prompted a large-scale military patient movement response from within the Indo-Pacific region," said Air Force Col. Christopher Backus, command surgeon, U.S. Transportation Command. "Ultimate Caduceus will assess Transcom's ability and capacity to conduct global patient movement at scale and in a field training environment." 

A German shepherd wearing a mask sits on a hospital bed with a handler beside her.
Exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025
Army military working dog, Vina, lays down as a notional patient during Exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025 at Travis Air Force Base, Calif., July 26, 2025.
Credit: Kenneth Abbate, Air Force
VIRIN: 250726-F-OY799-2068K

Patients were received at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, and Travis Air Force Base, California, and then transported to federal coordinating centers and medical facilities in and around Honolulu, Sacramento, California, and Albuquerque, New Mexico, said Army Maj. Latoya Toler, exercise branch chief, Transcom surgeon general. 

Troops in camouflage uniforms adjust medical equipment inside an airplane.
Exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025
Air Force airmen assigned to 375th Operational Readiness Squadron, Scott Air Force Base, Ill., adjust an oxygen hose for a notional patient aboard a C-17 Globemaster III airplane during exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025 at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, July 26, 2025.
Credit: Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Anita Chebahtah
VIRIN: 250727-N-ZA692-6900

Besides Transcom, other personnel involved in the exercise are from U.S. Northern Command, U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, Air Force aeromedical evacuation crews, Army Reserve Medical Command critical care air transport teams, Department of Veterans Affairs, Defense Health Agency, Department of Health and Human Services, as well as other regional health care and emergency response teams. 

"Ultimate Caduceus is a great opportunity for DHA to highlight our ability to deliver both health care to warfighters and capability to combatant commanders as a combat support agency. At the enterprise level, we remain focused on aligning military health and private sector resources against warfighter requirements and optimizing patient demand on transportation assets," said Anthony Ross, Defense Health Agency liaison officer to Transcom.  

Two women dressed in camouflage uniforms, sit inside an airplane reviewing notes.
Exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025
Air Force critical care air transport team members assigned to 375th Operational Readiness Squadron, Scott Air Force Base, Ill., discuss a notional patient aboard a C-17 Globemaster III airplane during exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025 at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, July 26, 2025.
Credit: Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Anita Chebahtah
VIRIN: 250727-N-ZA692-1081
Troops remove patients from a ramp in back of an airplane.
Exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025
Air Force medical personnel off-load notional patients from a C-130 Hercules airplane during Exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025 at Travis Air Force Base, Calif., July 28, 2025.
Credit: Gary Edwards, Air Force
VIRIN: 250728-F-RX511-1125

This exercise actively tested how the emergency response teams work together as part of the National Disaster Medical System to save lives during a potential national crisis.  

"Success to me is to increase interoperability across medical teams and systems so we can provide the highest level of care to those who need it most," Backus said. 

Airmen in camouflage uniforms offload a small shipping container from a flatbed truck.
Exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025
Air Force airmen assigned to 60th Logistics Readiness Squadron off-load shipping containers from a semi-trailer truck during Exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025 at Travis Air Force Base, Calif., July 24, 2025.
Credit: Air Force Airman 1st Class Ashley Rowell
VIRIN: 250724-F-PA306-1033
 

As the DOD's sole manager for global patient movement, Transcom leads aeromedical evacuation missions using high-capacity aircraft and en route care teams to transport personnel from the field to definitive care anywhere in the world.

"This joint and combined DOD, interagency and civilian partner medical team is something to be proud of and you can be assured they'll move mountains to bring premier care to those who need it," Backus said. 

More than 20 civilian hospitals participated, which is the most integrated into an Ultimate Caduceus exercise, said Nicole Hardy, Transcom's Ultimate Caduceus program manager.  

Medical personnel chat beside the door of a hospital room with a patient inside.
Exercise Ultimate Caduceus 2025
Reach 32 Air Medical Services team registered nurse Kris Tate, answers a last-minute question regarding the care of a notional military patient in the emergency department at Mercy Hospital of Folsom during exercise Ultimate Caduceus, in Folsom, Calif., July 28, 2025.
Credit: Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Anita Chebahtah
VIRIN: 250728-N-ZA692-1264

"There was also significant rotary wing participation from civilian emergency response teams," Hardy said. 

MIT Lincoln Laboratory participated in the exercise to streamline patient movement data using artificial intelligence and machine learning, said Mark Barnes, Transcom's liaison to MIT Lincoln Laboratory.  

"We're working to build an interconnected bridge between systems allowing for instantaneous data aggregation and dissemination," Barnes said. 

"Ultimate Caduceus is an annual patient movement exercise," Hardy added. "Exercises have focused on troop patient transfer from the Indo-Pacific in the past, as well as patient movement from the Middle East and Europe." 

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