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Army MEDLOG launches new program to close maintenance gaps

By Chief Warrant Officer 3 Richard HendricksOctober 21, 2024

Inspecting a ventilator
1 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Radames Feliciano, a biomedical equipment technician with the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency, instructs medics from 2nd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division, on how to properly run tests on a ventilator at the new Home-Station Medical Maintenance Support shop at Fort Liberty, North Carolina. (Photo Credit: Courtesy Chief Warrant Officer 3 Richard Hendricks) VIEW ORIGINAL
Inventorying medical equipment
2 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Radames Feliciano, a biomedical equipment technician with the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency, works with medics from 2nd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division, to inventory medical equipment at the new Home-Station Medical Maintenance Support shop at Fort Liberty, North Carolina. (Photo Credit: Courtesy Chief Warrant Officer 3 Richard Hendricks) VIEW ORIGINAL
Inside the new HMMS shop at Fort Liberty
3 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Pictured, from left, are Chief Warrant Officer 2 Terence Wills, Ramon Peryra, Radames Feliciano, Byron Mitchell, Matthew Turlington and Chief Warrant Officer 3 Richard Hendricks inside the newly established Home-Station Medical Maintenance Support site at Fort Liberty, North Carolina. (Photo Credit: Courtesy Chief Warrant Officer 3 Richard Hendricks) VIEW ORIGINAL

FORT LIBERTY, N.C. -- For nearly two decades, I have witnessed the challenges affecting Army units without organic medical equipment specialists.

They have medical devices, yet they have no people trained to perform field-level maintenance.

Often these units had to send their devices to a Medical Maintenance Operations Division, or MMOD, resulting in a decrement to their unit equipment readiness.

In fact, one of the main reasons I became a warrant officer was to fix these types of issues.

That is why I am proud to report that Army Medical Logistics Command is launching a program called Home-Station Medical Maintenance Support, or HMMS, to close these critical maintenance gaps that affect readiness.

HMMS provides field-level maintenance support to units without authorized biomedical equipment specialists (68A) on their Modification Table of Organization and Equipment, more commonly known as MTOE. This will align medical maintenance to existing sustainment processes of non-medical Army equipment. HMMS will also enhance unit medical equipment readiness and reduces overall costs for the Army.

HMMS is one part of a larger effort called MEDLOG in Campaigning, or MiC, which integrates medical logistics into the Army Sustainment Enterprise as part of the Army Campaign Plan 2023-2030. MiC will bring MEDLOG into the Army’s enterprise business systems and standardize the catalog, as well as create a single medical supply and pharmaceutical (e.g., CLVIIIA) catalog, based upon combat requirements.

We just launched the HMMS capability in a proof of concept at Fort Liberty in early October. In total, we received 52 pieces of equipment just on the first day of operations alone.

This initial site will support over 100 units, including active-duty and National Guard, in North Carolina during this initial “proof of concept” phase.

A key part of HMMS will be education. Some customers were unfamiliar with the new processes of opening and transferring work orders, but this is a great opportunity to utilize our representatives of the Logistics Assistance Program, or LAP, under AMLC’s Integrated Logistics Support Center. Logistics assistance representatives, or LARs, provide education and direct support to our customers, providing over-the-shoulder training for these units that do not have organic medical maintenance expertise.

This first HMMS site at Fort Liberty will be a key stepping stone for us, as we assess future sites for expansion of HMMS.

I believe HMMS will solve a critical problem for Army units without organic medical maintenance support. When fully implemented throughout the Army, not only will HMMS save the Army time and money, but also ensure medical devices are ready and fully mission capable when needed to save lives.

Chief Warrant Officer 3 Richard Hendricks serves as director of Home Station Medical Maintenance Support (HMMS), U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency