Temple High School Students Tour CRDAMC, Explore Healthcare Careers

By Rodney JacksonApril 30, 2026

Temple High School Students Tour CRDAMC, Explore Healthcare Careers
1 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Col. Mark Jacques, commander, and Command Sgt. Maj. James Brown, senior enlisted advisor, Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center welcomed Temple High School Medical Students for a tour of the hospital April 27. (Photo Credit: Rodney Jackson) VIEW ORIGINAL
Temple High School Students Tour CRDAMC, Explore Healthcare Careers
2 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Col. Mark Jacques, commander, and Command Sgt. Maj. James Brown, senior enlisted advisor, and hospital staff of Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center pause for a photo with Temple High School Medical Students during a tour of the hospital April 27. (Photo Credit: Rodney Jackson) VIEW ORIGINAL
Temple High School Students Tour CRDAMC, Explore Healthcare Careers
3 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Maj. Jason Muise, emergency department chief nurse, Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center explains how treatment is performed in an emergency room to Temple High School Medical Students during a tour of the hospital April 27. (Photo Credit: Rodney Jackson) VIEW ORIGINAL
Temple High School Students Tour CRDAMC, Explore Healthcare Careers
4 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Daniel Murray and Joel Cisneros, both paramedics with the Fort Hood Emergency Medical Services demonstrate how patients are loaded in an ambulance for Temple High School Medical Students as the group toured the Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center April 27. (Photo Credit: Rodney Jackson) VIEW ORIGINAL
Temple High School Students Tour CRDAMC, Explore Healthcare Careers
5 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Daniel Murray (forefront), paramedic with the Fort Hood Emergency Medical Services connects a Temple High School Medical Student to a cardiac monitor that Joel Cisneros, also paramedic with FH EMS reviews for abnormalities as the group of medical students toured the Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center April 27. (Photo Credit: Rodney Jackson) VIEW ORIGINAL
Temple High School Students Tour CRDAMC, Explore Healthcare Careers
6 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Maj. Jason Muise, emergency department chief nurse, Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center explains how treatment is performed in an austere and remote medicine training area to Temple High School Medical Students during a tour of the hospital April 27. (Photo Credit: Rodney Jackson) VIEW ORIGINAL
Temple High School Students Tour CRDAMC, Explore Healthcare Careers
7 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Cpt. Curtis Hawkins II, pharmacist, Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center guides Temple High School Medical Students on a tour of the pharmacy during a visit to the hospital April 27. (Photo Credit: Rodney Jackson) VIEW ORIGINAL
Temple High School Students Tour CRDAMC, Explore Healthcare Careers
8 / 8 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Dr. Adam Alvarez, pharmacist, Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center shows Temple High School Medical Students a sterile area where medicines are prepared during a tour of the hospital pharmacy April 27. (Photo Credit: Rodney Jackson) VIEW ORIGINAL

Temple High School medical students visited Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center for a guided tour of key hospital departments, gaining firsthand insight into health care careers and creating an interest in what military medicine can offer them.

The visit exposed students to real-world medical environments and highlighted a range of career paths within the health care field. Hospital leadership welcomed the group and spoke about the organization’s role in supporting the community.

“Opportunities like this give students a better understanding of what a career in health care looks like,” said Col. Mark Jacques, hospital commander. “We hope this experience encourages them to consider future roles in medicine, including military health care.”

Students toured multiple areas, including inpatient services, as well as the pharmacy and emergency departments, where staff explained daily operations and responsibilities.

Col. Thomas Nessler III, deputy commander for medical services, provided an overview of CRDAMC’s mission and the role of military medicine. Maj. Hugh Elsea, a critical care nurse, along with the nursing operations staff, guided students through designated areas of the inpatient services floor where no patients were present, demonstrating how care is delivered to admitted patients.

In the pharmacy, students learned about medication safety, and the role pharmacists and technicians play in patient care.

“Pharmacy is more than dispensing medications,” said Dr. Adam Alvarez, a pharmacist. “We work closely with providers to ensure treatments are safe and effective.”

Alvarez added that pharmacists and technicians serve as the final safety check before medications — whether oral or intravenous — are administered, both in the hospital and after discharge.

In the emergency department, students toured a treatment area without patients and learned about the fast-paced nature of emergency care.

Students also had the unique opportunity to visit the emergency department’s austere and remote medicine training area, where Army physicians and nurses adapt the skills, they use in the emergency department for field conditions. Army Medicine professionals rely on this training to deliver both humanitarian and military medical care in challenging, out-of-hospital environments.

“Every second counts in the ER,” said Maj. Jason Muise, emergency department chief nurse. “Teamwork and communication are essential to delivering quality care.”

The group also received an ambulance tour from Fort Hood Emergency Medical Services personnel, who explained their roles and demonstrated the equipment used to care for patients after dispatch.

The tour supports Temple High School’s medical college and career readiness program, which focuses on postsecondary planning. The program helps students align academic goals with future careers by offering support with college applications, financial aid, including FAFSA and scholarships, resume building, and interview skills. It also provides career exploration, internships and work-based learning opportunities.

Kristi Burke, college and career advisor for Temple High School, said the experience plays an important role in student development.

“Tours like this help students better understand their career options and the steps needed to achieve their goals,” Burke said. “For me, the most rewarding part is witnessing the ‘lightbulb’ moment when students connect with a specific career path — it transforms their curiosity into passion.”