PEORIA, Ill. — An ambulance with medical supplies makes its way from Peoria to war-torn Ukraine.
Chris Manson and his 7-year-old daughter were hanging out at home when images from the war in Ukraine came on the TV. Before he could change the channel, Manson was facing tough questions from his daughter, a young girl trying to understand what she saw.
His daughter’s words got Manson wondering if there was a way – even a small one – that people in central Illinois could do something to help the citizens of Ukraine.
Working for one of the largest health care systems in Illinois, Manson said it seemed to be a natural fit.
At first, Manson thought about sending medical supplies. To make sure they would be needed, he first contacted the Ukrainian consulate.
Working in government relations for Peoria’s OSF HealthCare, Manson knew how to navigate the system to get answers. Ukrainian officials accepted any offer of help, providing Manson with a list of the most critically-needed supplies, ones that were also easy to ship overseas.
Manson decided not to stop with supplies, but also something to transport them and the medical teams needed to provide care in the war-torn country – an ambulance.
Plans moved forward quickly after Manson reached out to Andrew Rand, CEO of Advanced Medical Transport (AMT), the ambulance provider in Peoria.
“I called Andrew and to his credit, I explained what had happened, very quickly after he said, ‘you know, it’s the least we can do. We’re happy to help. We’ll get you an ambulance. Do you want gas or diesel?’ That was really what he asked me was, which do you prefer? And I was blown away by the generosity and his willingness to just jump right in,” says Manson.”
With the ambulance secured, Manson next had to get supplies donated. OSF HealthCare, AMT, the Peoria Fire Department, OSF Mission Partners, and first responders from as far away as Virginia packed it full of supplies.
“Once we were sure that we had an aircraft to move that ambulance, in a very short time period, literally less than a week, I think it was probably four or five days, we put the word out on a Monday that we had an ambulance that we had an aircraft that we’re going to do this. We had a blessing ceremony for the ambulance, and we invited Mission Partners to bring either a clotting agent for people bleeding, or the survival blankets that we were also told were needed, and Mission Partners just delivered in droves, Manson said.”
Working with the Ukrainian Medical Association of North America, the ambulance was loaded on to a Boeing 747 cargo plane in Chicago on March 29 along with 356 pallets of supplies collected by UMANA – 86 tons in total.
“I was most nervous until I saw the ambulance literally on the 747. Once it was on the 747 and I’d met with the Ukrainian consulate in person and seeing everything on the plane and in motion, I started to kind of take a breath and say, ‘okay, this is happening.’ I saw when it landed in Luxembourg, I saw that had been transported to Poland. It’s my understanding it’ll be brought into a certain point and they’ll take out most of the extra medical supplies that they will just take to probably one hospital to be distributed to others. The ambulance then will pretty quickly move forward into either a combat zone or another area of the conflict and it’ll be put right to use, Manson said.”
As of April 7, the ambulance was enroute to the Ukrainian Ministry of Health.
Other health systems and ambulance companies have been reaching out to see if there are opportunities for them to help alleviate the suffering in Ukraine.
“I was thinking it was just going to be this one opportunity, to really give central Illinois a chance – not to get into the fight – but just to do something and help out a little bit, to show our solidarity with people in Ukraine. But I will tell you, once we were successful in getting that ambulance on that aircraft and getting it sent, I have now received calls from California, from other places in the country, basically saying, hey, you know, this works, we can get American ambulances over there to the Ukraine. Get the Ukrainians more,” Manson said.
As an added bonus, a 7-year-old girl is seeing what can be done through a simple act of helping others.
“This is a horrible situation, this war. But the way everyone’s reacting, everyone just wants to help and that’s been really cool. And so I think my daughter is seeing that, and I think if anything else, I hope she’s just seen that there’s a lot of good in this world,” Manson said.
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