Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs visits the MEDCoE

By Tish Williamson, MEDCoE Director of CommunicationsOctober 20, 2020

Thomas McCaffery, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, has his temperature checked while entering Willis Hall on his visit to the U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence.
1 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Thomas McCaffery, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, has his temperature checked while entering Willis Hall on his visit to the U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence. (Photo Credit: Jose Rodriguez) VIEW ORIGINAL
Lt. Col. Kathleen Samsey and Capt. Cesar Veliz provide Thomas McCaffery, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, and Maj. Gen. Dennis LeMaster, Commanding General U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, a briefing on the patient...
2 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Lt. Col. Kathleen Samsey and Capt. Cesar Veliz provide Thomas McCaffery, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, and Maj. Gen. Dennis LeMaster, Commanding General U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, a briefing on the patient simulators used to teach students during the Combat Paramedic course. (Photo Credit: Jose Rodriguez) VIEW ORIGINAL
Thomas McCaffery, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs (second from the right) gets a first-hand tour of the Combat Paramedic Program simulation laboratory during his visit to the U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence.
3 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Thomas McCaffery, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs (second from the right) gets a first-hand tour of the Combat Paramedic Program simulation laboratory during his visit to the U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence. (Photo Credit: Jose Rodriguez) VIEW ORIGINAL
Staff Sgt. Tatjana Francis, a National Guard Soldier assigned to 126th Aviation Regiment in Maine attending the Combat Paramedic Program, bumps elbows with Thomas McCaffery, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs after he presented her...
4 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Staff Sgt. Tatjana Francis, a National Guard Soldier assigned to 126th Aviation Regiment in Maine attending the Combat Paramedic Program, bumps elbows with Thomas McCaffery, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs after he presented her with a military challenge coin. (Photo Credit: Jose Rodriguez) VIEW ORIGINAL
Mr. Robert (Bob) Sippel, Combat Paramedic Program Lead Instructor, bumps elbows with Thomas McCaffery, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs after he presented him with a military challenge coin.
5 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Mr. Robert (Bob) Sippel, Combat Paramedic Program Lead Instructor, bumps elbows with Thomas McCaffery, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs after he presented him with a military challenge coin. (Photo Credit: Jose Rodriguez) VIEW ORIGINAL

JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-FORT SAM HOUSTON, Texas – During his first visit to San Antonio, the Honorable Thomas McCaffery, Assistant Secretary of Defense, or ASD, for Health Affairs visited the U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, or MEDCoE, as part of a larger visit to Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston, Texas from October 19-21, 2020.

The purpose of the visit was to provide the ASD opportunities to meet key leaders and learn more about the many military medicine organizations who serve together on the base. His planned stops also included the Brooke Army Medical Center, or BAMC, the Medical Education and Training Campus, or METC, and the Naval Medical Forces Support Command, or NMFSC.

As the Health Advisor to the Secretary of Defense, each command was encouraged to highlight the unique capabilities that support military medical training or healthcare delivery. The ASD was also interested in seeing how commands are operating in the COVID environment.

Maj. Gen. Dennis LeMaster, MEDCoE Commander, led the tour of the Combat Paramedic simulation scenario training, an overview of the Army’s Flight Paramedic Program, and hosted an office call with the ASD.

The discussion touched on the new Combat Paramedic Program, or CPP, a 30 week pilot program that began in January 2020 and graduated its first class in August, and how the Combat Medic training program adapted to thrive despite the added challenges of COVID-19.

The Combat Medical Specialist Training Program, or CMSTP, rapidly transformed training to a blended learning environment due to COVID-19. A true collaboration, the team is made up of both military and civilian personnel. Military cadre and students are assigned to the MEDCoE and the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, while civilian personnel are assigned to the METC and are Defense Health Agency, or DHA, employees.

In addition to changing their delivery methods, the CMSTP team focused on improving attrition rates and developed a new refresher course for students finding the National Registry of Emergency Medicine Technicians, or NREMT, content difficult to master. The refresher course decreased the course Army Combat Medic attrition rate by over 90 percent. This change saved tens of thousands of dollars by graduating Soldiers into the operational force who would have otherwise been reclassified or become a loss to the Army.

During the pandemic, MEDCoE has graduated nearly 13,000 students in more than 600 courses. They safely moved nearly 7,000 Advanced Individual Training, or AIT Soldiers of varying medical military occupational specialties in and out of the training pipeline on JBSA without a single instance of sending a COVID positive student to a follow-on unit of assignment.

MEDCoE was proud to share the accomplishments, challenges, lessons learned, and synergy demonstrated between commands during their collective COVID response, with the ASD.

In addition to MEDCoE, BAMC, METC and NMFSC, the ASD visited several other medical organizations to include the 59th Training Group and medical AIT students at JBSA-Lackland. He met with the Commander, U.S. Army North and the Commander, U.S. Army Installation Management Command on day one of his three day visit.