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USNS Mercy (T-AH 19) - The hospital ship USNS Mercy (T-AH 19) Supply department, comprised of approximately 150 Sailors, along with four Pacific Partnership 2024-1 mission supply personnel, medical team planners and civilian mariners, worked together to provide logistical support for Pacific Partnership, the largest annual multinational humanitarian assistance and disaster relief preparedness mission conducted in the Indo-Pacific.
During the four-month mission, which started in early October 2023, Mercy Sailors worked alongside allies and partners to strengthen relationships, bolster host nation capacity to provide essential humanitarian services and supported efforts to prepare in calm to respond in crisis. Now in its 19th iteration, Pacific Partnership executed mission stops in the Republic of the Marshall Islands, Solomon Islands, the Republic of Palau, and two stops in the Federated States of Micronesia. Supply began the preparation phase for the mission as early as December 2022 by looking back at past missions to gauge what material would be needed. Sailors ensured funding was requested and available, and worked closely with the Medical Planning team to identify what the host nations and doctors needed to fulfill the mission. Once all of that was done, orders were placed for Mercy to receive and stow over 300 humanitarian line items before the start of mission. “Our medical providers cannot successfully provide life-changing care in these remote islands unless they have the right medical equipment and consumables,” said Cmdr. Monique Schoenthal, Mercy’s supply officer. “It’s imperative in Supply that we get what they need, when they need it.” After the preparation phase was complete, shipboard activation began, said Schoenthal. This consisted of opening the galley patient nutrition rooms, Ship’s Store, stocking the warehouse with over 300 pallets of medical and non-medical material, and embarking approximately 800 service members onto Mercy by assigning living spaces, handing out linens and activating the ship’s post office. Supply’s job continued throughout deployment and required Sailor’s to constantly be thinking ahead to future stops and their unique requirements. Mercy was anchored out during every mission stop, which required material movement via barge and water taxies for personnel and supplies to go between the ship and shore.
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