Senior Airman Abigail Pack (left) and Senior Airman Andrew Hutkowski collect a sample of an unknown powder for identification during a training exercise Sept. 17 at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
The possibility of being exposed to chemical, biological, radiological or neurological hazards are low, but being safe is a number one priority of the Air Force. In order to ensure a safe and secure ...
Conducting occupational health surveys, sampling drinking water and responding to emergencies are just some of the primary missions of the 375th Aerospace Medicine Squadron’s Bioenvironmental ...
Modern battlefields have many sources of potentially harmful airborne substances, but that is not the only place that Airmen can be exposed to harmful environmental factors. Air Force bioenvironmental ...
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