Posted on 05/03/2026 1:13:05 AM PDT by naturalman1975
In rural Maryland, USA, Travis Reyes savours the simple things. A cup of coffee on the deck with his wife. A walk in the nearby woods. All of it sweeter because, against all odds, somehow, he is still alive.
"I think most of it is stubbornness. A little too stubborn to die," Travis told 7.30.
In August 2023, Travis was a 20-year-old US Marine Corporal stationed in Darwin. He was part of the crew of a tilt-rotor MV-22 Osprey taking part in an Australian Defence Force-run exercise, Predators Run.
On the morning of August 27, Travis's Osprey left Darwin but didn't make it to the landing zone on nearby Melville Island. The tilt-rotor crashed in the bush.
"Once we got closer to the island, I noticed that we were over-banked a little bit," Mr Reyes said.
"Then I grabbed onto the closest hydraulic Iines I could, which was connected to the ramp. And that was all I remember."
Three Osprey crew members died, but 20 Marines on board — including Travis — survived.
Emergency physician Dr David McCreary from The Alfred Hospital in Melbourne was one of the first on the scene, as part of a helicopter-based team contracted to provide medical services for the exercise.
"We did a lap overhead of that kind of through and around the smoke and trying to see any sign of any survivors," Dr McCreary said
"My first thought when I looked at it was there's no way anyone could have survived that."
Dr McCreary was lowered by winch next to the crash site.
"[I] arrive at the scene and there's a couple of Marines around, there's some sitting up against trees and there's Travis lying on the ground," Dr McCreary told 7.30.
More than two-and-a-half years later at home in Maryland, Travis still doesn't remember much.
"I woke up on the ground surrounded by a bunch of people, it was very brief, and then I closed my eyes again," Travis recalled.
"And then I woke up two months later in Texas."
Scalpels in the chest
Travis's remarkable medical journey started in the Melville Island bush, just metres from the crash site.
Dr McCreary was working to stabilise Travis so he could be transferred back to Darwin by helicopter.
During the proceedings his heart stopped and his breathing stopped," Dr McCreary told 7.30.
"So, we were able to do some lifesaving procedures. Then we put a scalpel in both sides of the chest.
"His heart started almost immediately after that."
Travis's medical procedures were only just beginning. He had multiple broken bones. In Royal Darwin Hospital, his left lung and spleen were removed.
A team from The Alfred Hospital in Melbourne arrived to put Travis on an Extra Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation or an ECMO machine.
The machine works by providing vital life support that cleans and pumps oxygen into the blood when the body can't.
Travis was then airlifted to Melbourne. He didn't know any of this.
"It's crazy to think that you could be asleep for that long and miss out on all that, and so much is going on and you have no clue," he said.
"It's a lot to think about."
At The Alfred, Travis was the focus of an enormous medical effort to get him well enough to be transported back to the US.
Dr Joseph Mathew was the Acting Director of Trauma Services when Travis arrived from Darwin. He was being treated with huge amounts of inotropic drugs to manage critical heart failure.
"The dosage was the highest I've seen in 30 years," Dr Mathew told 7.30.
"He was very sick, and then he became even sicker."
Potentially fatal and invasive fungal infection
With Travis's wife Jasmine Policarpio and his parents at the Alfred to support him, his condition took a potentially fatal turn.
An invasive infection, known as Mucor, which comes from tropical fungi, spread to the bone on his face and down the neck, where major blood vessels supply blood to the brain.
"After hearing about the infection, that's when my optimism kind of went down," Jasmine told 7.30.
"I guess dealing with it at the time was just … so hard to manage."
"When we found that fungal infection … especially in the face, there's limitation to what you can do, " Dr Mathew said.
The medical team was told by Travis's family he wouldn't want treatment that would leave him partially paralysed.
Another option to remove Travis's face and go ahead with a face transplant was also rejected.
Dr Bridget Devaney was told despite several surgeries on Travis's face, the infection could not be stopped.
"All of his specialists … said this is not survivable anymore. The surgeons have said they can't take any more of his face," she told 730.
Dr Devaney's medical specialty is hyperbaric chambers. They can adjust oxygen levels and atmospheric pressure to help cells heal.
She knew that could help Travis, but no one on an ECMO machine had ever been treated in a hyperbaric chamber.
"It … had never been done before anywhere in the world.
So, I somewhat tentatively sent a text message to our intensive care director at the time," she said.
"'What do you think about putting together a team to kind of explore this as a possibility for him?' And I think I finished off with 'crazy idea, yes or no'?"
The Alfred doctors decided to give that crazy idea a shot after consulting Travis's wife Jasmine and his family.
"He got 13 treatments over 15 days. Over the course of that time, the tissue just became healthier and healthier and started to granulate up," Dr Devaney said.
Word spreads of world first
Since then at least two Alfred patients have had hyperbaric treatments similar to Travis. And word about this medical first has spread.
"We've had people reach out from all around the world to find out what we've done and how we've done it," Dr Devaney said.
"We've published three papers in the Journal of Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine about Travis, about the workflows and governance and how we did it safely.
"Other people around the world are now starting to do some testing with ECMO in their chambers as well. So it's really exciting."
After 38 days in The Alfred, Travis was ready for transport back to the US in a giant C 17 military transport. He was still on an ECMO machine.
His trip to a US army hospital in Texas is the longest ECMO retrieval flight in history.
Travis finally left hospital in Texas after eight months of intensive medical care. His wife Jasmine has been there through all of it.
"I fully believed that he would overcome it," she told 730.
"(I felt) he's just going to beat everything, beat the odds. And he clearly did beat the odds."
Travis has since left the US Marine Corps, and has now taken up competitive lifting, archery, and golf.
His recovery has been remarkable and gratifying for The Alfred team that saved him.
There are still challenges though. Travis is now legally blind, he has had a number of strokes and needs a brace on his left leg to walk.
In late March he and Jasmine were virtually reunited in an online event with the many doctors and nurses at The Alfred who fought to keep Travis alive.
For the former Marine, seeing the size of The Alfred medical team was an eye opener.
"I was just in awe. I didn't realise how much actually went down logistically in my time in Australia," he told 7.30.
"It was just so awesome to meet all those people and see them and hear the stories."
Many in The Alfred team say Travis's recovery is a case they will never forget.
"I think he's a champion. His family is terrific, I can personally assure you. So, I think it is overall a great outcome," Dr Mathew told 730.
Both he and Jasmine hope to return to Melbourne in the future.
"We both definitely want to visit Australia soon, because especially after the reunion, he's more excited about meeting everybody and just really getting to give his gratitude face-to-face," Jasmine said.
"I wish I could put into words how grateful I am," Travis said.
"I am just so grateful for them all."
I appreciate your post, and your Bio: thank you.
But what about YOU ? Are YOU ready to face God in judgement?
John 14:6 (the Bible) Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.”
I understand where you’re coming from on this. But it comes off as trying to hijack the thread a little bit.
CC
I don’t really see the relevance, but the 1975 in my user name is the year I became a Christian. I don’t like using the term ‘born again’ personally, but others would.
I was baptised as an infant close to two decades before that but didn’t take it at all seriously until I was nearly twenty.
An uplifting story. Thanks for posting.
Criticism and interrogation of the poster are not warranted in this case.
Do your thumping somewhere else.
Please post info on the other survivors an cause of crash.
Hyperbaric oxygen chamber treatment is a revolutionary cutting edge treatment method that my daughter has used in treating her cancer. She swears by its therapeutic values.
Amazing of survival against overwhelming odds. The doctors in Australia did an extraordinary job.
naturalman1975, thank you for posting this excellent and informative article that provided inspiring details many of us would have been ignorant of. Your input on this forum from Down Under helps many of us realize that our formidable ally over the last century is not lost to Leftism yet.
Inkston I don’t see the relevance of your post to the subject at hand either. I can appreciate the desire to evangelize Christ, but I don’t see how your post would be helpful in that respect.
Full report can be downloaded here. (Very large and comprehensive document)
Captain Eleanor V LeBeau, Corporal Spencer R Collart and Major Tobin J Lewis were killed in the crash.
Travis Reyes (the marine from the original article) was critically injured. I understand two other marines were seriously injured but recovered, and there were a number with minor injuries.
It’s a good thing this Marine’s aircraft never crashed in Canada. When his breathing and heart stopped they would have just let him go.
The Australian army doesn't have medical teams?
“Hyperbaric oxygen chamber treatment is a revolutionary cutting edge treatment”
It used to be common in the first half of the 20th Century when it was identified as a method for treating cancer. Not so revolutionary a century later. One of the more famous facilities (because of the luxury accessories and size):
Cunningham Sanitarium
https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/378
Nearly every service member has had to face the question: What would be the limit of tolerance that would make me resign.
With me it would have been “ordered to ride on an Osprey”. This machine has killed so many it should be put on the list with Islamic fanatics, IEDs and training accidents.
"For the former Marine, seeing the size of The Alfred medical team was an eye opener."
He's blind Jack!
“”This machine has killed so many””
I was thinking of the same thing..we knew a young man stationed at El Toro Marine base, CA in the early ‘90’s and he went on to work on Ospreys at some base in the CA desert - can’t recall the name of it - not unusual after so many years. I want to connect it to where the Blue Angels trained in the winters but ???? They did have some bad Osprey accidents/incidents while he was there...
Certainly, it does. But for large preplanned exercises, these are supplemented by specialist civilian teams. The Alfred is one of the best emergency hospitals in the world, with a very large emergency department (by Australian standards), and has teams specifically set up to do this.
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