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Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 1
FROM THE CHAIRMAN
To All MSC Association Members …. How much has changed since we
last met! It seems almost surreal as I sit here “locked down” at home
trying to find a way to be helpful as our nation struggles in response to the
pandemic. If you’re like me, you are proud of those serving (or asked to
serve again) today in their selfless and passionate response to our nation’s
call. We all salute you! We are especially proud of the contributions
MSCs will bring to the fight! Thank you all past and present … I like to
think there is a little bit of each of us shared among the generations of
MSC warriors. Gosh, I miss being in the “game.”
If you are like me, you have had some time to reflect on a number of
things. In a podcast I did with Beckers Health, I referred to it as “God’s
time out for mankind.” You think about life during the period of BC
(before coronavirus) and how it may be different in AC (after
coronavirus). I thought long and hard about how it will possibly change
my personal life, my outlook, my values and of course … our healthcare
system. I am trying to adapt to this “quiet time” to catch up on a few
things I have neglected … mostly my health and learning.
Let’s start with the idea of health. It is interesting, as a nation we are
supposedly the best-prepared nation in the world for an outbreak, but
struggling to contain and respond to demand. Maybe our healthcare
system hasn’t created health, just more healthcare or the system wants you
and I to say unhealthy for selfish reasons. I see them as different. Do you?
I could talk for days about the complexities of each. However, it is
unfortunate most the most effective “vaccine” to this particular virus is
the absence of chronic disease … and we as a nation are not healthy. I
hope we learn this huge lesson and reset our system to create healthier
citizens before our next challenge.
Next, I am finding time (for the first time in a while) to reflect on self-
improvement. I am certainly reading more, eating healthier and
exercising more regularly. I am reading a few things just for
entertainment, but I am really expanding my mind with some great works
on leadership, mindset, communication, and organizational change. I am
USAF MSC Association (MSCA) Inc. Spring 2020 NEWSLETTER
Aint No Stink’n COVID-19 Gonna Scare an USAF MSC!
MSCA Team
Col Don “Bulldog” Taylor, Chairman
Brig Gen Chuck Potter, Vice-Chairman Col Leslie Ness,
Treasurer Lt Col Joe Haggerty, Secretary
Col Doug “DrQD” Anderson, Director/Newsletter Lt Col Ty Obenoskey,
Director/By Laws Col Steve Pribyl, Director/Education
Lt Col Joe Burger Director/Member Support Capt John Haas
Director/Awards Lt Col Bryan Schneider, Director/Total Force
Col Greg Cullison, ADAF Liaison Col Brian “B-TAG” Acker
Project Connect Col Jim Moreland, Webmaster/Reunion Capt Wm. M. Copeland,
Gen Counsel
Capt Ken Bonner, Member Services
Col Tal Vivian Historian Lt Col Dan Sherred,
Chaplain Col Linda Eaton Survivor Support
Charlie Brown Honor Roll Emirza Gradiz,
Sponsorships
Past Chairmen
Col Doug Anderson Col Denise Lew Col Randy Borg
Col Joe Vocks Col Jim Moreland Lt Col Arthur Small
Col Frank Rohrbough Col Steve Mirick Col John F. Riley
Col Lewis D. Sanders Col Ben P. Daughtry Col Edward S. Nugent
BGen Don Wagner Col William M. Johnson
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 2
also enjoying teaching “virtually” to my students. Even though I am not enjoying the limited
mobility, I do enjoy the open schedule to do things I want and need to do. I hope you are as well.
Lastly, let’s talk of values. I may have
taken too many things for granted over the
years. Yes, we have all had life challenges
and none of us has been immune from a
“broken road” to where we are today. But
I think we can take a “time out” that God
has given us and reflect regardless of
location such as Balad. Take a few
minutes each day and recognize the
people, relationships, opportunities and
memories you are grateful for. I did
everyday while deployed to Balad. I
believe we all have been blessed with great lives. All it takes is the first RPG to remind you. We
were blessed with a career no matter how difficult or dangerous that had a sense of purpose. A
higher calling beyond a paycheck It offered some level of prosperity and assembled good friends
we can count on whenever we need them That is a blessing we must never forget. We are
especially blessed. Remember that. Leave no one behind.
So, for my final thought, if any of you need anything during this unique time in history, please
reach out to any of us, the MSCA exists for each other. We are here for you, so please just ask.
I know I have a few extras rolls of TP to spare to anyone in need...
~Don
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 3
VICE CHAIRMAN MESSAGE
Greetings! I think you all have heard enough on COVID-19, the Stock Market, Oil prices and all the other
unsettling things that are happening around the world. So let’s talk about something that is very positive.
As the Assistant Vice President for University Programs down in San Antonio Texas, I would like to tell
you a good news story about the College of Allied Health Sciences. First, a little background for those who
don’t know about the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS) located in Bethesda
Maryland and San Antonio Texas. It consists of four separate schools, the School of Medicine, the Graduate
School of Nursing, Post Graduate Dental College, and the College of Allied Health Sciences (CAHS).
The mission of the USUHS is to provide the highest quality education and research programs in the health
sciences to those selected individuals who demonstrate dedication to a career in the health professions of the
uniformed services. The USU is authorized to grant appropriate undergraduate transcripts, certificates,
degrees, and advanced academic degrees as well as to establish postdoctoral, postgraduate, and technological
institutes related to treatment and research in the health sciences. The USU develops and supports academic
and training programs designed to ensure maximum utilization of the health science labor force, facilities,
and equipment within the Department of Defense and military medical departments worldwide.
In particular, the CAHS was established in 2017, by law, to award credit and grant degrees to qualified
students of the Medical Education & Training Campus (METC). METC delivers instruction to primarily
enlisted personnel; these classes count as credit within the Major Requirements of an Associate of Science
in health Sciences and/or Bachelor of Science in Health Sciences degree(s). General education credits are
received in two ways: recognizing military training as academic credit and transferring credits from other
accredited and DoD approved colleges and universities.
This is a tremendous opportunity for our enlisted medics. They leave METC with college credits towards
their individual training subjects and can pursue that course of study or use that credit towards whatever
their interests are when they get out of the Service. Others who return to METC after they have been out in
the MTFs becoming proficient in their medical AFSC/MOS/NEC, come back for specialty training and they
can then earn their certificates or degrees with those additional credits from USUHS. Not only is this a
READINESS issue, but for Guard and Reserve troops, this gives them the opportunity to work in those
medical areas back home and then when recalled to Active Duty, they are already a full-up round as they
say. No two-week train-up period necessary because they already have earned the proper credential and are
fully trained. This is a wonderful program and I am proud to be part of it.
If you have any questions about USUHS or CAHS, just give me a call.
Charles E. Potter,
MA, FACHE
Brig Gen, USAF (ret)
#19 MSC Chief,
Assistant VP, USU
Southern Region
No Reunion Attendees were harmed during the making of these photos!
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 4
FEATURE STORIES
AND
SPECIAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS
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CORPS CHIEF’S MESSAGE
SUSAN J. PIETRYKOWSKI, Brig Gen, USAF, MSC, Director, Manpower, Personnel & Resources
(SG1/8) & Medical Service Corps Chief, Office of the Air Force Surgeon General
Note: edited variation from the original and printed with permission from the Corps Chief
MSC Teammates! No doubt this message finds you in the throes of COVID-19
response, where every day feels like a sprint toward a finish line not yet in
sight. Make sure to practice healthy self-care and engage those around you to
check on their wellness. I am incredibly proud of you and feel immense gratitude
to lead a group of professionals dedicated to health solutions for our nation and
patients in every environment. I hear and read every day how many of you are
leading innovative practices in COVID response such as Col Mary Stewart and
her team implementing a drive-thru pharmacy at the 59 MDW safely
dispensing medication to patients in over 1200 vehicles a day! A big shout out
to Col Foutch and the 88 MDG physicians who are working on ground-breaking
treatments for COVID-19 patients. Here’s a quote from Col Foutch in a recent
article:
“Wright-Patterson Air Force Base prides itself on our interaction and coordination in our local community,” said Air Force
Col. Michael Foutch, 88th Medical Group Commander. “We could not be more proud of these dedicated physicians and
our ever expanding partnerships with the greater Dayton area medical community.”
There are a myriad of great things happening in our Corps beyond the COVID-19 pandemic. First, I want to
thank Col Lynn Johnson, Col John Mammano, Col Fred Grantham, Col Patty Fowler, Col Antonio Love, and Col
Brad Weast for their service on our MSC Development Team and Senior Council. We now welcome new
Associate Corps Chiefs Col Charlie Marek (Medical Logistics) and Col Dolphis “Z” Hall (Resource
Management), accompanied by our new At-Large members, Col Alisha Smith, Col Greg Coleman and Col Lauren
Byrd. Further, we just released results for CY20A Col (MSC), Lt Col (MSC), and Maj (MSC) promotion
boards. Congratulations to those officers selected to serve at the next rank! Continue to represent our Corps, the
AFMS, and AF well!
Additionally, I want to highlight the State of the Corps teleconference we held on 24 Mar 20. Thank you to the
396 participants who were able to dial in. I realize many of you had other things going on that week ☺!
Fortunately, we recorded the event, and the slides with audio are uploaded to our MSC Facebook page.
Additionally, PDFs of the slides and question and answers are uploaded to the MSC KX. Spoiler alert: we have
several MSCs with mad rap skills. You’ll have to scour the audio to find out more ☺. Lastly, the ACHE AF
Regent, Col Craig Lambert and I would like to congratulate the recipients of the 2019 ACHE AF Regent Awards:
• Senior Career/Mentor Leadership Award: Colonel Wade B. Adair, FACHE
• Mid-Career Leadership Award: Lt Col Jason M. Estes, FACHE
• Early Career/Junior Leadership Award: Captain Tamiko T. Gheen, FACHE
• ACHE Joint Federal Sector Award for Diversity and Inclusion (Early Careerist) Award: Major Sean D.
Rotbart, FACHE
This recognition is well-deserved and the hardware is in the mail! Thank you again! Between AF Med Reform,
4684 reductions, COVID-19, what we are doing is both challenging and amazing as we hunker down and venture
forward at the same time. But I can’t think of a more talented and professional team to be a part of!!
v/r, ~BGPie, π
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Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 7
THE VALUE OF A LEADERSHIP ETHOS: INTERVIEW WITH MAJOR GENERAL SEAN
MURPHY, DEPUTY SURGEON GENERAL (COO), AIR FORCE MEDICAL SERVICE
Douglas E. Anderson, Col (Ret), USAF, MSC, DHA, FACHE
Author’s Note: This article is an outgrowth of my personal experience, observations, teaching graduate-level leadership courses, and conducting two seminars at the Annual Congress on the American College of Healthcare Executives (ACHE).
I want to thank my colleague, David Womack, SVP, Kaiser Permanente as part of our partnership in the ACHE seminars
and Major General Sean “Tigger” Murphy for his time and willingness to share their leadership insights.
Introduction
Many leaders charge into new leadership positions with
aspirational words or phrases--inspire, trust, mission first and
people always, collaborates, open door policy, and integrate,
etc. Many have no idea what those terms truly mean much less
practice them consistently over time. As time passes, these
leaders risk becoming ineffective, even toxic by their
misguided decisions, confusion of expectations,
misinterpretation of others, apathy, etc. Eventually, the
department or organization spirals downward—the mission
falters or fails, people suffer, culture becomes corrosive, etc.
The Big Question: How do leaders spiral themselves and
others upward and sustain positive momentum? Partial
answer: a well thought out written leadership ethos. Part 1
explains the WHAT, WHY, and BENEFITS of a leadership
ethos. Future Parts will explain HOW to develop and live by
your ethos, thus helping you achieve your aspirations and keep
the organization spiraling upward.
What is a Leadership Ethos?
A personal leadership ethos does more than describe
someone’s leadership style. It serves as a foundational purpose
and reference point. The ethos defines guiding principles to
manage departments, teams, and organizations. It serves to
hold leaders accountable to their principles by leading by
example and setting the tone and pace for their environment
culture. It should answer the question: Who Am I? What can
others expect from me?
More specifically, a leadership ethos is a personal written
statement to convey YOUR leadership beliefs, principles,
expectations or YOUR commitment to live by and for others
to embrace. The ethos is meant to get past a grey area
especially when new leaders assume their positions as the
formal leader. Thinking about it, writing it down,
communicating it, and “living” it gives you and those who
work with or for clarity and consistency. Figure 1 illustrates how some leaders have crafted and refine their ethos
for years as part of their leader development journey. For you, it should be part of your personalized leader
development journey. Sadly, for many it’s a missed opportunity.
Figure 1
My Cs on Leadership
Major General Sean L. Murphy, Deputy
Surgeon General (COO), Air Force Medical
Service
Civility: Be kind and supportive. Share
credit, be a good wingman, and keep your
sense of humor! Treat others as they would
like to be treated.
Confidence: Be calm and steady always. Do
not let ego stand in the way of progress. Take
pride and ownership - this is our house!
Communication: Understand first, and then
be understood- Listen before you react. Find
the truth. God gave us two ears and one
mouth for a reason. :^)
Creativity: Be a sparkplug! Always ask,
"How can I do this better?" Be part of the
solution, not a contributor to the
problem. Ask "How can we say
YES?" Don't tolerate the "It's not my job"
mindset.
Common Sense: Use it.
Care More: They don't care about how much
you know until they know how much you
care.
Collegial/Collaborative: Work together: think
win/win. No one of us is as smart as all of
us. All voices count.
Candor: Do the right thing every time, even
when no one is looking. Tell the truth
without hesitation.
Courage: Be proactive, not reactive. Begin
with the end in mind - develop a clear vision
on all we do. Always be willing to put your
job on the line. Never, never, never give up!
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 8
A leadership ethos is revised over time. It is based on alignment with individual experiences, current or future
roles, or an organization’s aspirations and values. As a result, the leader’s ethos should be deeply personal and
professional, conveying not only priorities, expectations, and communication style but also their values and
morals. In summary, the ethos answers the question: Who Am I … in more depth on authenticity.
Why a Leadership Ethos is Important?
How many leaders do you know published and lived by their leadership ethos? Did they reflect their true
authenticity? In my experience teaching graduate level courses and seminars, "Gimme SHELDR: Preparing for
Strategic Health Leadership" at the American College of Healthcare Executives (ACHE), development of a
leadership ethos was the most instructive and challenging segment of the seminar. In addition to presenting 17
strategic health leadership (SHELDR) competencies, students create a “self-reflective” leadership ethos followed
by a leader development plan. For most students, the ethos and leader development plan is their first exposure to
self-development and growth.
While novel or apprehensive for many, the leadership ethos answers the questions: Who Am I? What Do I
Believe? What Will I Tolerate? Not Tolerate? What’s Our Aspiration? Most health administration students
have never been challenged to develop a leadership ethos and according to the research, most healthcare
organizations do not have a leader development plan. Neither have many health leaders. Some, such as Major
General Murphy, developed their ethos early on. For example, he developed his ethos 12 years ago, revised it 5
times, and updated it two years ago. According to General Murphy, the value of a leadership ethos is captured in
Figure 2 during an interview.
Figure 2
Leadership Ethos Interview: Major General Sean L. Murphy
Deputy Surgeon General (COO), Air Force Medical Service
What was the primary source of inspiration or idea to develop the first version of your ethos (i.e., class,
mentor, book, boss, speaker, my idea, other)? Both were combination of significant events early in my career
and began after I read the Covey book, 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. My mission and values statement
was generated in the early 90s. The first version of the 7Cs (now 9Cs) began in 1997 when I was the Chief of
Hospital Services at Fairchild Air Force Base, Washington. The CEO (Commander of the Medical Center)
inspired me to dig deeper into the insights of Covey, attend the courses, and read the other books such as
Principle Centered Leadership and 7 Habits of Highly Effective Families. The 7Cs came as a result of an
inspirational champion for the AFMS Skunk Works (Customer Service Leadership) training program and
strategy. The real value of the session was working through our leadership team dysfunctions. We worked
through our conflicts, misperceptions, poor communication, understanding each other’s biases, and strengths.
After 2.5 days, we signed a set of mutually agreed upon cultural norms manifesto on how to deliver care and
service in a positive environment. Combined with my mission and values statement, the cultural norms became
my 7Cs thus my commitment to servant leadership. Both are tied to my spiritual, human and psychological
behaviors or how people interact. In my following assignments I would use these to shape the norms and
behaviors of my staff.
List and discuss 3-5 reasons why you developed your leadership ethos? We are always part of a team and I
have always participated in a team sport regardless of location or level. Understanding culture and human
behavior contribute to greater team effectiveness. First, understanding the team members helps the “coach” align
their strengths and weaknesses with the goals to pull in the same direction. It is very similar to knowing what
position a person should play on a team. A first baseman is very different then a shortstop. Second, what it
means to rely on faith and be a servant leader. I have used both faith and the whole concept of servant leadership
as a fallback during adversity and as a means to be resilient and bounce back. The 7Cs reflects my faith. They
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 9
Figure 2
Leadership Ethos Interview: Major General Sean L. Murphy
Deputy Surgeon General (COO), Air Force Medical Service
help me work through complex issues, understand there is something out there bigger than me, and help me
define myself as a servant leader. Third, by the time you get old enough it is important to understand that we
are all going to die. The 7Cs drive me to live life backwards so you do not end up “lost” during your journey in
life. If you do not have a map, you will never know where you are. The 7Cs became my personal tactics,
techniques, and procedures to drive me to be more resilient, drive my faith and friendships and helping me grow
to the person I wanted to be, and not the person I am at times.
Summarize the top 2-3 ways or how you have used or applied your ethos? After development and revision,
I became assigned to greater levels of leadership. I would discuss the now 9Cs in the first month of my
assignment to convey what I believe, set expectations, behaviors, and decision making. For example, while
directives are important, the 9Cs drive behaviors and decisions to meet the spirit and intent of the directives as
well as challenging the status quo or deviate when beneficial to the mission. I use them when I talked to any
crowd. I reference them often during meetings and other forums as part of my servant leadership style. I believe
the 9Cs guide decisions, keep individuals out of trouble, and makes my job easier. I use them in staff and town
hall meetings, discuss with new senior leaders, various leadership education forums such as Commander’s
(CEO), department leader courses, and human resources development teams. It continues to be a foundation for
strategic communication and guide for tactical behavior as a servant leader.
If you have revised your ethos since your first version, why did you revise it? The 7Cs went 9Cs as result
of listening to the Air Force Chief of Staff at a Commander’s call. I added common sense and care more.
Common sense was an “aha” moment. Often people will follow rules just because they have been there for a
while as opposed to using their brain to actually make a decision that would be best to get to the goal. They do
not realize that people wrote those rules and can re-write them if it makes sense. The “care more” is the classic-
those you serve care less about how much you know, and much more about how much you care about them as
individuals.
From your perspective, what’s been the value? Has it made a difference in your leadership journey (or
not)? Please explain. As a Commander (CEO) at the medical facility and various headquarter staff levels, once
you start rolling this out and talking about it all the time it became easier to reinforce positive behavior and talk
through correcting poor behavior or performance. It made things and decisions simpler and easier. The 9Cs
helped me and others make better decisions, acquire feedback, and create a more open environment. By
referencing them, the 9Cs helped me reduce a ton of work by not using other tools as a hammer such as law and
directives, and it also supported the empowerment of others to do what’s right, do a better job listening, and
most importantly, hold myself accountable. That is why I fall back to my mission and value statement and 9Cs
and constantly ask myself: How Can I improve as a leader, as a person? It helps me become the servant leader
I want to be.
How could development of a leadership ethos be used in a leader development program? Where should
the process start? Or, should it? Covey emphasized the value of the mission and values statement as a
foundation. Covey inspired me to develop the personal mission statement and to modify it as you mature. It
helps hold yourself accountable for your own behavior and helps you not become your worst own enemy. It
helps you be more human by allowing others to understand you, communicate what you stand for and what you
won’t tolerate. As I read leadership books, I find they say the same thing, but we all learn differently. That’s
where the value of storytelling and personal development helps remove individual biases or misperceptions of
others, improves our active listening, challenges status quo and allows us to ask questions in a safe environment.
Teaching this could help others learn this early on in their careers, contribute to better teamwork, and build trust
at all levels. While we are all different learners, we can insert a developmental activity into various forum as
means to improve emotional awareness. The activity should be part of ongoing leader development and training
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 10
Figure 2
Leadership Ethos Interview: Major General Sean L. Murphy
Deputy Surgeon General (COO), Air Force Medical Service
programs, the earlier the better, updated between assignments or jobs. It can be introduced in various courses to
help aspiring leaders with their personal leadership development journey. There must be a strategy on who to
develop and how much you want to spend on their personal development.
Do you have any other comments, questions, or concerns? Live a good and honorable life. Remember,
someday you’re going to die and you should have no regrets looking back. The mission and values statement
and 9Cs helped me to become my true self, understand myself and others better and helps others in the process.
Source: Personal Interview, 14 Apr 2019
Sound like Covey’s Principle Centered Leadership? It is. When you create a leadership ethos, you have to think
about your leadership competencies and evaluate values most important to you or it's not the “real” you. You
make yourself, subordinates, and colleagues accountable and more authentic and predictable. The leadership
ethos should serve as an ethical and professional compass everyone on your team or in your organization can
refer to, embody, and embed in their interactions, decisions, and actions. By writing it out, you'll know it by heart,
able to rattle it off without hesitation, connect it to a story or experience, and use it for opportune moments such
as a 30-second elevator or key note speech. Here is a summary of benefits of a leadership ethos:
1. Provides discernment (to uncover what you know): clarity, objectivity, and a foundation for actions, decisions,
and priorities … points toward your authenticity.
2. Helps build trust among followers, stakeholders, and superiors with a constancy of purpose
3. Makes you more confident and accountable to match words with actions
4. Drives you to become grounded regardless of the chaos, situation, and dilemmas you face
5. Signals you are a predictable serious centered, grounded, and resilient leader.
6. Assures you won’t get lost at crossroads and improved ability to find your way
7. Causes you think through what you mean, what you say, and what you do
8. Makes it easier to share with others and causes you to self-reflect more often.
Who Needs One?
Anyone in a leadership position should develop an ethos. Even
if you’re not managing teams or departments, creating a
leadership ethos will make you a better follower, informal
leaders, and formal leader later. Thinking about your priorities,
what drives you, and codifying your personal and professional
principles is a valuable professional exercise everyone can
benefit from. As a bonus, Major General Murphy developed a
personal mission statement. It is summarized in Figure 3. While
similar to his 9Cs, these reflect his competencies and personal
“pledge” to be the best he can be as a leader. If you’re not in a
leadership position, someday, you will. Figuring out exactly
what you value most as a leader early helps you become more
self-aware, confident, and consistent in your approach.
Ultimately, your ethos builds your persona and reputation
leading to trustworthy relations with others and opportunities.
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 11
Summary
Most leaders succeed in their positions. However,
many leaders charge into new leadership positions
with aspirational words or phrases only to falter or fail.
The Big Question: How do leaders spiral themselves
and others upward? Partial answer: a well thought out
written leadership ethos. Part 1 has explained the value
and definition of a leadership ethos—it serves as
foundational purpose and reference point. It answers
the question: Who Am I? What can others expect from
me? A leadership ethos answers the questions: Who
Am I? What Do I Believe? What Will I Tolerate? Not
Tolerate? What’s Our Aspiration? For some, this may
sound a bit CoveyISH. It is.
When you create a leadership ethos, you must think
about your leadership competencies and evaluate the
core values most important to you. Otherwise, it's not
the “real” you. By writing it out, you will know it by
heart and be able to use it as your executive messaging
guide. Anyone in a leadership position should develop
an ethos. Even if you are not managing teams or
departments, creating a leadership ethos will make you a better follower, informal leaders, and formal leader later.
Ultimately, it builds your persona and reputation leading to trustworthy relations with others. Do you have one?
Share it.
Stay tuned for Part 2. (References and citations available upon request)
Figure 3
Major General Murphy’s Personal Mission
Statement
I will have a positive impact on others I interact with
(from their perspective, personal or group). Other lives will be enriched by our interaction
(family, friends, work, church, social, etc.). I will: 1. Remember interactions as a moment of
choice/integrity/truth I can influence positively. 2. Not forget how my attitude, good or bad,
influences others’ attitudes in a positive or
negative direction. 3. Influence people positively. It is my choice. 4. Leave each situation, which I engage in, better
than it was prior to my engagement. 5. Have integrity while accomplishing my mission
statement. 6. Try to correct any situation in which I fail at my
mission statement. 7. Not let assumptions or pride get in the way of
accomplishing my mission statement
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ANNOUNCING THE 2020 MSCA WEBINAR SERIES
Stephen J. Pribyl, Col (Ret), USAF, MSC, LFACHE and Curt Prichard, Col (Ret), USAF, MSC, FACHE
We are pleased to announce the 2020 MSCA Webinar Series. With so many face-to-face opportunities for
travel and gathering together for professional development postponed or cancelled at this time, the series serves
as a great venue to stay connected and learn.
April 27: Paul Batz, international speaker and founder/CEO of Good Leadership Enterprises will be providing
an overview of insights on how to assess your balance in life and how to develop an action plan for
improvement. Based on his book, What Really Works, Paul will share how to live with less stress, and lead
with less fear.
August 10: Jon Mohatt, Lt Col (ret) USAF, MSC will share his personal story of being confronted with a
breach of integrity within his organization, his journey as a whistleblower, and lessons learned.
October/November: Curt Prichard, Col (Ret) USAF, MSC and currently part of Defense Health Agency
leadership will be leading a panel discussion discussing transition from active duty to civilian.
Unless otherwise stated, all presentations will be broadcast via Zoom with final details to be shared a couple of
weeks before each presentation. It is best to use your personal PC. In addition to the 2020 Series, we are
already starting to plan for 2021 and invite suggestions for topics and speakers. Please forward to
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MSC HISTORY, LEGACY,
CULTURE
AND
MEMBERSHIP
ARTICLES, TIPS, AND ADVICE
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THE FLU PANDEMIC OF 1918: THE ROLE OF MILITARY MEDICINE
Talbot N. Vivian, Col (Ret), USAF, MSC, DHA, FACHE
In 1918 the Great Flu pandemic struck the world and the United States, where over 675,000 Americans died.
This pandemic strained the capabilities and resources of the United States Army Medical Department. The
epidemic officially raged from January 1918 and ending in December 1920. There were at least three waves of
the Flu, with the second wave being the deadliest.
In April 1918, the first wave of Flu victims was identified in Haskell County Kansas, but the pandemic was given
the name the Spanish Flu. This misnomer was partly due to the First World War and censorship in the United
States. The world press had free access to Spain, who was neutral in the war and events there very closely watched.
The Flu in Spain, killing over 8,000,000.
In recent years historians and epidemiologists have attempted to discover an exact origin of the 1918 Flu. There
have been several theories put forth as to the Flu’s origins. One was that it came from China, along with 98,000
laborers brought to England in 1917. There had been a flu outbreak in China in 1916, but more recent studies
have shown that the Chinese epidemic was not the H1N1 Flu. Haskell County Kansas reported the first 5 cases
on 5 April 1918, and recent genetic studies of tissue from soldiers who died from the Flu of 1918 point to its
origin being from southwestern Kansas in 1918. It is speculated that it was brought to Camp Funston, Kansas,
by a new Army recruit or National Guardsman. Camp Funston was a Basic Training site used by the U.S. Army
and forms part of Ft. Riley, Kansas.
The U.S. Army Medical Department Expands
A fortuitous event occurred that allowed the U.S. Army Medical Department to expand beginning in early 1916.
The U.S. Army activated the Nation Guard to deal with Pancho Villa and the Mexican Revolution. The Surgeon
General of the United States Army at the time was Maj. Gen. William S. Gorgas. General Gorgas pushed hard
for the expansion of the Army Medical Department. In his testimony before Congress in January 1916, he noted
that the size of the medical department had not changed since 1908. The size of the Army had increased by 50%.
The resultant ratio of fewer than five physicians to 1,000 men was, in his opinion, woefully inadequate.
General Gorgas believed that seven physicians for every 1,000 men were a bare minimum for peacetime and that
10 per 1,000 would be necessary to meet wartime needs. Should Congress decide upon a peacetime Army of
140,000 men, the medical department would need to be more than doubled in size requiring 537 new medical
officers to reach the required total of 980. The timing of the Army Medical Department expansion allowed for
adequate medical staffing to meet the needs of both the war in Europe and the coming Flu Pandemic. In addition
to personnel, the Army Medical Department was short materiel. The Army had only one-quarter of the
congressionally recommended emergency supplies on hand. General Gorgas, when asked by congressional
leaders, responded that the Mexican expedition had depleted stocks. In reality, the Line of the Army had siphoned
off money intended for use by the Medical Department.
The Medical Department and Flu treatment
When the Flu hit Camp Funston in late 1918, it was treated as “the regular flu,” which is to say providing palliative
care with soldiers being placed in unused barracks and supply warehouses. The Isolating of patients was hoped
to limit the spread of the disease. Treatment for the Flu at this time was limited to providing a healthy diet,
ensuring adequate hydration, administering aspirin (which was given in such high doses that it killed some
patients), and time was all that was available.
Though the first commercial ventilator was patented in Germany in 1907 by Heinrick Drager, they were
unavailable to the U.S. Army. Mass production was slow, and by 1918 only 6,000 had been produced. Antibiotics,
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as we know them, were unknown at this time. Penicillin was not discovered until 1928, and Sulpha drugs did not
come along until 1935. By August 1918, the Army Medical Department was beginning to address what seemed
to be a much more virulent Flu strain that was killing more soldiers than normally expected. The symptoms being
reported were also somewhat unusual. The death frequently occurred within two days of the appearance of the
first recognizable symptoms.
Camp Devens Massachusetts
Camp Devens was a point of debarkation for soldiers headed for Europe. In June 1918, troops from the 1st Infantry
Division, Camp Funston Kansas arrived. Shortly after cases of the Flu began to appear. The first case of Flu was
initially labeled as meningitis. Within ten days, both the hospital and infirmaries were overwhelmed. Many
patients recovered within a few days, but the sheer number of those affected was unprecedented, with 8,000
patients needing hospitalization at the facility designed for 2,000 within the first week. By the end of September,
Camp Devens had seen a total of 10,000 cases of influenza. Pneumonia complications in 2,000 of them ended in
500 deaths. This death rate was to prove low compared with other sites.
At Camp Devens, almost 1/3 of the regular nurses at the base hospital were also among the ill. When cases begin
to appear at other camps, the Surgeon General’s Office sent to Camp Devens, a team of eminent medical scientists
from such institutions as Johns Hopkins, the Rockefeller Institute, and Harvard University, to study the situation.
After praising how the outbreak was being handled at the camp, especially the work of the Surgeon and
epidemiologist, the team submitted recommendations that included quarantine of the camp and having all men
eat at the same side of the mess hall tables. The disease spread too rapidly for the team’s findings to be of material
help.
The Rest of the Army
Within a week of identification of the first case at Camp Devens, eight more widely separated mobilization camps
were affected. Medical personnel, in their exhausted state, fell easy prey to the disease. At Camp Grant Illinois,
100 medical enlisted men were ill. Eventually, six nurses and 12 enlisted men from the hospital detachment died
in the epidemic. Eleven physicians were stricken though none died.
The Red Cross began moving additional nurses in from Chicago to help with patient care. The nurses were a
mixed blessing in that civilian nurses fell ill at a higher rate than the Army nurses. The Red Cross and the Army
refused to use fully trained African American nurses. The Flu peaked between 14 September 1918 and 8
November 1918. During these eight weeks, 316,089 soldiers were infected, killing over 45,000 U.S. soldiers. This
is more than died in combat. Exact numbers are unknown as some who died had comorbidities such as having
been wounded or gassed in Europe, where the cause of death was frequently attributed to combat.
Effects of World War I and the Flu Pandemic
Physicians managed all administrative activities until 1917. Army line leadership and members of Congress
recognized physicians could not be jacks of all trades and whose skills were needed to treat patients. Over the
objections of members of the Medical Department on 23 January 1917, the Army Ambulance Service was
created, and on 30 June 1917, the Army Sanitary Corps was established. It was not until 4 June 1920 that the
Medical Administrative Corps was formed.
The Army Nurse Corps had been founded in 1901, but they were all contract nurses. They were not commissioned
until 1947 and up until then held courtesy rank. During the pandemic, the Army Nurse Corps was supplemented
by nurses from the American Red Cross.
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THE IMPACT OF BILL MCHAIL ON THE COMBAT CASUALTY CARE COURSE (C4) AND THE
EVOLUTION OF MEDICAL READINESS TRAINING
Col (Ret) Ray Benedetto, DM, LFACHE, Co-Author of It’s My Company TOO!
With Lt Col (Ret) Bill Mays, FACHE, and Dorothy McHail
Introduction
In 1979, the Service missions were in a significant state of flux after Vietnam despite an ongoing sizable presence
in Europe to contain Soviet expansion. When President Carter assumed office after Gerald Ford, he faced a
Congress that was equally confused and uncertain about national security policies; estimates of Soviet strength
by the CIA were remarkably soft by some accounts1. Carter’s strategic leadership was also questioned because
he announced troop withdrawals from Korea, decided against building the B-1 to replace the B-52 platform, and
cut back the Navy’s shipbuilding program, despite the fact he was a Navy veteran. Carter was an intelligent
leader, but his “process” approach to problem resolution may have been his biggest hindrance, especially in
dealing with immediate crises2.
Although the threat of nuclear war appeared to be lower in the late 70s and early 80s, it was very real, especially
for those of us stationed in Europe and facing the Iron Curtain “up front and personal.” The Soviet deployment
of SS-20 missiles upset the balance of power in Europe, which was a provocative step in challenging NATO as a
stabilizing entity3. Strategic Air Command’s mission of nuclear deterrence was still valid from a defense planning
perspective, but how the US faced the Soviets was muddied.
Senior USAF leaders acknowledged the Air Force, as a whole, had moved away from a warfighting state of mind
toward a managerial mindset that needed correction4. The rise in terrorism directed at US personnel and
installations around the world also added to the urgency to improve readiness, 5 but weaknesses in US military
capabilities were never more apparent than in the events of April 24, 1979.
Disaster in the Desert
Forty-one years ago, militant Iranian college students who supported deposing the Shah of Iran overran the
American Embassy in Tehran, Iran, seizing and taking hostage 53 American diplomats and citizens, including
US Marines who served as Embassy guards. For six months the political standoff between the US Government
and rebel forces grew increasingly frustrating, to the point where President Carter ordered Operation Eagle Claw,
a military rescue mission to retrieve the hostages. The operation, also known as Desert One, involved a multi-
service Special Ops force but failed miserably when two aircraft collided in the desert, causing the deaths of five
USAF personnel and three Marines as well as injuries to five other troops6.
Several factors contributed to the debacle, not the least being lack of interservice training. Carter blamed his loss
for reelection on his failure to secure the release of the hostages, but the debacle represented much more. When
President Reagan was inaugurated on January 20, 1981, he vowed to “begin an era of national renewal.” He
stated, “When action is required to preserve our national security, we will act. We will maintain sufficient strength
to prevail, if need be, knowing that if we do so, we have the best chance of never having to use that strength7.”
Still a very fresh memory that contributed to President Reagan’s resolve to strengthen our Military Services,
Desert One revealed US policies, practices, and training in dealing with terrorists required immediate attention,
especially interservice cooperation and training in response to such threats.
The Beginning of Medical Readiness
In response to perceived weaknesses in military medical preparedness, Lt Gen Paul Myers, USAF/SG from
August 1978 through July 1982, established Medical Readiness as a top priority and sponsored the first Medical
Red Flag (MRF) exercise in November 1979 at Keesler AFB. MRFs were week-long exercises that eventually
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reached hundreds of medics at the six USAF medical centers-Andrews, Keesler, Lackland, Scott, Travis, and
Wright-Patterson. Each MRF was designed to train battlefield casualty management to hospital personnel
expected to deploy to Europe where medical planners anticipated significant casualties if conflict erupted8.
An additional motivation was the realization that knowledge and practice in military trauma medicine gained
through years of experience in Vietnam was quickly evaporating as military physicians retired or returned to
civilian practice. The stop-gap effort to recruit fully qualified physicians from private practice through the “Pony
Express” Program had yielded only a handful of “retreads” with combat medicine experience from either Korea
or Vietnam. Although the Health Professions Scholarship Program (HPSP) had begun yielding results with
military-sponsored physicians in civilian and military residency programs, newly minted HPSP grads lacked an
understanding of what they would face in whatever future conflicts they might serve.
Building Operational Medical Readiness Capabilities
The success of any operation depends on the strengths of the human capital employed to create solutions for
complex problems. In addition to the Air Force’s MRF initiative, the Service SGs agreed that interservice medical
training program for physicians was paramount considering the Desert One debacle. The Service SGs envisioned
the Combat Casualty Care Course (C4) as the first of several courses that would change medical preparedness
for future conflicts; its mission has not changed since its inception: “To enhance the operational medical readiness
and pre-deployment trauma training skills of tri-service medical officers9.” General Myers knew having “the right
people on the bus10” was critical to getting the medical readiness courses up and running successfully in the
shortest possible time, thus it was no fluke he selected then-Captain William (Bill) A. McHail, Jr. as the first
USAF member of the fledgling C4 cadre.
A Warrior Mustang
Bill McHail began his 35-year military career in 1957 as an enlisted 902X0 medical technician. Three years later
he married his high school sweetheart, Dorothy Shannon, with whom they raised two sons, both of whom would
eventually follow their father into the Air Force. As a 90250, Bill participated in the optical screening of the
original Mercury 7 astronauts and by February 1970, he had advanced to Staff Sergeant. While stationed at Offutt
AFB, he obtained his Bachelor’s in Business Administration from the University of Nebraska at Omaha under
Operation Bootstrap. He also completed NCO Leadership School where, as a student, he initiated a speech
competition that was recognized for adding a new dimension to the professionalism of the school. Shortly
thereafter, he headed to Bien Hoa, Vietnam, where he served as NCOIC, Professional Services for the 6251st
USAF Dispensary.
Bill’s superiors recognized his exceptional organizational skills and thorough knowledge of his field, noting his
poise, confidence, and leadership in guiding others and prioritizing Medevacs and caring for the wounded,
especially during rocket/mortar attacks. Never one to sit on the sidelines, Bill engaged frequently in Medical Civic
Action Programs (MedCAPs) where he used his clinical expertise to care for the indigenous population on a
routine basis. These frequent excursions into “the bush” gave Bill a much broader perspective of “combat
medicine” that would have impact in future assignments.
In March 1972, Bill returned to Conus with a one-day promotion to Technical Sergeant, beginning OTS at
Lackland the following day. He excelled in officer training and began his MSC career at the School of Health
Care Sciences, USAF (SHCS) in July 1972. Little did I realize when Bill and I met at Sheppard AFB as classmates
in Class 72-C that the paths of our Air Force careers would be so intertwined. I had found my brother.
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The Silver Fox
Bill and I lived in the same off-base apartment complex during the 9021 Course, carpooled to class, played golf
at least twice a week together as part of our “required” individual PT requirement, and socialized together since
we were the only 9021 students with children in tow. Although our dates of rank were nearly the same, Bill had
over 10 years of active duty under his belt as well as a mane of silver hair to show for his wisdom and experience.
Bill had a great sense of humor, related well to everyone regardless of rank, was an exceptional student and
teammate, and readily shared his wisdom as a “mustang,” all of which earned him the nickname “The Silver Fox.”
Bill went on to Patrick AFB as Assistant Administrator/Registrar, where he eventually served as Medical
Squadron Commander and Medical Logistics Officer and was engaged in the Apollo and Apollo/Soyuz Space
Programs. Bill joined Recruiting Service at Shaw AFB in January 1976 as part of the second wave of professional
medical recruiters. We reconnected personally in November 1977 at SHCS where we were assigned as Group
Training Evaluation Officers with adjoining desks. Our common experience in the 9021 Course, medical
recruiting, and conducting Phase II evaluations across the country served as foundation for continuing
collaborations over the years.
During our tenure at SHCS, Colonel Bill Holder (dec) transformed the School’s culture with his “Touch of Class”
initiative, which included the way all visiting senior officers were met and served while at Sheppard. Bill and I
were regularly tapped as escort officers, which required attention to the smallest details of each visitor’s itinerary.
These opportunities to interact with the “movers and shakers” of the AFMS introduced us to senior officers with
whom we would eventually serve in other capacities. In short, Colonel Holder was grooming us for future
assignments through this additional duty.
Evaluator and Action Officer Par Excellence
Bill’s vast background in field operations, healthcare delivery, and hospital management enabled him to develop
rapport across all teaching departments as well as rapidly achieve proficiency as a training evaluator. His
exceptional attitude, maturity, and skill in addressing sensitive issues with senior officers served him well when
he attended SOS in Residence in late 1978, where he was one of the top three graduates in a class of 643 students.
Bill honed his executive communication skills at SOS where his team was also recognized with the Chief of Staff
trophy for being the top section in both academics and field leadership.
Bill’s drive for excellence resulted in several significant improvements when he returned to SHCS, particularly
the planning and implementation of training evaluations for the new Medical Red Flag (MRF) training program
for physicians. He adapted MRF tests to ensure easy administration at Wilford Hall Medical Center, which was
the largest MRF conducted, and “then directed computer scoring and results reporting to participants, MAJCOMs,
and medical education accrediting agencies.” Bill’s “superior initiative and can-do attitude, especially with
respect to MRF exercises” positioned him as the sole evaluator for MRF workshops that engaged several hundred
physicians.
Bill’s “comprehensive reports received wide distribution with USAF/SG, MAJCOMS, and staff agencies of other
services,” and MRF’s high visibility required frequent briefings to senior level visitors to SHCS and the Sheppard
Training Center Commander and staff. Holder “used him in more varied and expanded roles more than any of
the other captains in his command because of his outstanding talent” and the trust and credibility he generated.
Although more of Bill’s time was being directed to readiness initiatives, the Chief of the Nurse Corps requested
him “by name to conduct a special survey of critical care nursing” that resulted in restructuring nurse training at
SHCS. Bill’s performance also earned his appointment as the only USAF Evaluator to the Tri-Service Evaluation
Committee for C4 as well as supervisor of the tri-service evaluation team. Bill’s devotion of time to medical
readiness training programs made him the logical choice to be the “first USAF officer assigned to the Tri-Service
C4 course at Fort Sam Houston, TX.”
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The Birth of C4
Prior to his physical relocation to San Antonio in June 1981, Bill was involved in a Joint Air Force/Navy
evaluation of C4 and assisted in the formulation of the organizational chart and responsibility descriptions for
principal C4 staff. As a member of the C4 Curriculum Working Group, he helped write criterion objectives for
the course that were subsequently approved by the Tri-Service Surgeons General as the basis for combat training
of military physicians. As a result of these initiatives, Bill received the US Army Academy of Health Sciences
Commandant’s Award for “unselfish devotion of time and effort as C4 Task Force member.”
The Start-Up
Since C4 was a start-up without a designated TOE at the time, Bill served under SHCS as Chief of the Tri-Service
Support Branch with Fort Sam Houston as the operating location (O/L). He alone developed AF requirements for
first and second Task Force personnel increments, including AFSCs, grades, and justification of need for all
human and material assets. He also established the AF Task Force operating location with little to no resources,
securing scarce resources to support the mission, including blank ammunition for field exercises. As the only Air
Force officer officially assigned to C4, he served as sponsor for all AF personnel arriving for duty and ensured
their smooth transition to a Tri-service organization and culture.
Bill “dedicated long hours, excellent judgment, and sound
applications in negotiating with various agencies to gain resources
for C4” and “prioritized, organized, and executed a myriad of very
short suspense taskings with 100% on-time delivery” that resulted
in the first C4 course for 120 student physicians “under extremely
difficult working conditions.” As an ATC instructor, he taught
Army, Navy, and AF physicians field medicine and AF
aeromedical evacuation systems. He was the ubiquitous leader,
involved at all levels of operations, ensuring all details were
addressed for immediate and long-term needs. He developed all
C4 communications as well as numerous internal management
systems, e.g., student and faculty records, curriculum, and
evaluation, that included accreditation with the College of
Surgeons.
Mc Hail in his standard C4 uniform
of the day.
I was one of several USAF MSCs selected to serve as tactical officers in the second C4 course in January 1982.
I saw Bill’s leadership firsthand and his impact well beyond the Air Force. From out of nothing Bill set in motion
the foundation through which 1800 physicians from across the Services were trained in 1982 alone. Superiors
cited Bill’s leadership behind the high morale throughout the growing tri-service military and civilian force; he
consistently got “optimum results in spite of shortages or time constraints.” His immediate superior noted, “He
was one of a select team who took an untried idea and made it work—better than anyone could have imagined.”
Solidifying the Foundation
When C4 was designated a DoD Joint Activity, Bill’s role in guiding all operational aspects of the C4 course
expanded to include Chief of Administration, which involved creating, coordinating, and guiding interfaces with
local commanders, MAJCOMs, and agencies of all three Service SGs. At the executive level, Bill’s “exceptional
briefing and negotiation skills were instrumental in getting agreement and support from the Army’s Academy of
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Health Sciences, HQ Air Training Command (ATC), SHCS, and the AF Surgeon General.” His “exceptional
communication skills” included authorship of the manuscript the Academy of Health Sciences Commandant used
in briefing the three Surgeons General and the introductory letters to C4 DVs, faculty, and students. He “excelled
in representing the AF and developing ways and means to conduct C4” and performed “all decision actions
between the Tri-Service Task Force and USAF agencies” required to build the medical training pipeline.
By the second year, C4 was pumping through 20 classes annually, each with 120 officer students and 16 tactical
officers from all services. Bill’s oversight included 100 C4 Task Force members while he juggled full-time
management with classroom requirements in field conditions with 16-hour days nearly 40% of his time. As the
AF/SG representative on the Tri-Service Evaluation Committee, he was charged with “quality assurance of
medical readiness training” and “structured evaluation formats to guarantee objectives were met.” The
consummate professional in handling “critical projects down to the last detail,” Bill coordinated protocol activities
for visiting dignitaries that included the Secretary of the Army, the ATC Commander, and the Surgeons General
of all three Services, 12 NATO Air Forces and the British Army.
Building on an Exceptional Design
Bill’s backgrounds in instructional design and evaluation were critical when he wrote the Plan of Instruction and
associated curriculum that were presented to the three SGs for approval. The C4 course was the first of what are
now several resident continuing education courses under the Defense Medical Readiness Training Institute11.
C4’s mission has not changed since its inception, but the medical specialties it targets have expanded to include
physician assistants, nurses, dentists, and other medical specialties. All receive “training in field leadership that
prepares medical officers with the knowledge critical in conducting Role I and Role II healthcare operations in
an austere, combat environment”11.
The current course design -- three days of Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) followed by four days of field
training -- has not changed significantly since its inception. Although the internal topics may have changed titles,
the stresses of delivering “care under fire” remain the same. Simulated mission-oriented medical scenarios were
always part of the design, but what has changed is a simulated Role II facility utilizing simulator technology.
As a Tac Officer in one of the first classes, I recall field exercises as opportunities to teach young physicians
critical thinking about triage and delivering care under stress, skills as critical today as then. From its inception,
the course has challenged students in “encountering combat scenarios in varying roles of leadership and team
organization” and engaging them in “the planning, rehearsals, and execution of the medical mission.” To date,
thousands of officers have completed the course, which is the only National Association of Emergency Medical
Technicians (NAEMT) Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) course endorsed by the American College of
Surgeons.
Bill received numerous commendations for his work in “formulating and conducting the first C4 classes,” most
notably from the Army and the Air Force SGs, the latter of which also acknowledged “his inputs into Medical
Red Flag exercises.” In his final months with C4, he facilitated revisions to the Plan of Instruction and lesson
plans and served as the Contracting Officer’s Representative (COR) for over $40,000 in administrative fees paid
to the American College of Surgeons for ATLS certification of C4 students. The intensity and breadth of his
efforts in building and supporting C4 were embodied in receipt of the Professional Excellence Award by the
Standardization/Evaluation Team from Sheppard AFB, promotion to Major on 1 May 1984, and receipt of the
Defense Meritorious Service Medal. Bill was also selected to attend Armed Forces Staff College (AFSC) in
Norfolk, VA, where “all of his work…exceeded course requirements.”
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Impact on Readiness Beyond C4 and Medical Red Flags
Bill was assigned to the Air Force Combat Operations Staff as
Medical Readiness Training Manager after graduating AFSC. His
“keen grasp of Medical Readiness policies and procedures” and
“skillful command of the English language” were evident in his
complete re-write of AFR 160-25, Medical Readiness Plans and
Training, which included reducing the volume in half; a
comprehensive revision of AFR 50-20, Self-Aid and Buddy Care
(SABC), and the “formulation and publication of revised medical unit
reporting requirements in AFR 55-15, Unit Combat Readiness
Reporting.” His “expertise in course design methods and sensitivity
to man-years” were critical in “restructuring the Medical Red Flag II
training program” to support “increasing wartime readiness while
increasing peacetime productivity.” Bill’s impact as a key AF/SG
staff officer was extremely broad as the “Air Force’s authority on
medical readiness training.”
Bill represented the AF/SG on all joint Medical Readiness Training (MRT) matters with the Assistant Secretary
of Defense (Health Affairs) (ASD (HA) panel for Wartime Medical Skills Training. As Program Manager of the
AF Contingency Medical Readiness Training project, Bill expedited MAJCOM approval of the curriculum and
training of actual assemblages AF medics would operate if deployed. The breadth of his actions “greatly
influenced the increasing state of medical readiness Air Force wide:” Conceiving, formulating, and disseminating
the SABC refresher program to preserve the AFMS four echelon concept; guiding the Medical Readiness Training
(MRT) to being the “model program among the Military Services” according to ASD(HA); streamlining the
Continuing MRT program to save nearly 400,000 training man-hours AF-wide; expanding combat training for
medical professionals within Reserve components of the Armed Forces; and the meticulous and unparalleled
organization and delivery of the Medical Readiness Symposia in 1986 and 1987.
Bill McHail’s broad experience, leadership, indomitable spirit, and ability to work “jointness” were crucial in his
subsequent assignment as Chief, Medical Plans Division for US European Command (USEUCOM) in Stuttgart,
Germany. He worked directly for the future AF/SG, then-MG Alexander (Rusty) Sloan, who gave him
additional responsibilities as Executive Officer during “continuous contingency operations (SHARP EDGE,
DESERT SHIELD/STORM, PROVIDE COMFORT).” Bill “directed the medical mission to Syria to recover
Frank Reed from Arab terrorists” as well as “two major Joint Staff medical exercises.” Bill molded “joint service
and allied subordinates into a superbly capable multi-talented team” that “revolutionized unified command
medical planning” with the NATO Southern Region support concept. His briefings to US and NATO general
officers on a myriad of complex theater issues reinforced his reputation as an exceptional officer slated for a “high
level leadership position.”
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Changing Perspectives
Bill and I were “brothers in spirit” throughout our officer careers, making every promotion through Lt
Colonel together, advancing within ACHE to fellowship, and sharing so many life events while
stationed at Sheppard and living in San Antonio. As the 0-6 promotion board neared, we had a
conversation about the future. I was not surprised he and his wife, Dolly, wanted to spend more time
with family. Although sorely disappointed our mutual AF journey would be coming to an end, I fully
understood his perspective since all our children were older and going their own ways.
Their older son, William Arthur the 3rd (Butch)
had completed eight years of AF active duty as
a dental lab technician and had moved to Idaho
where he and his wife Janelle were raising their
family and setting up their own lab. Their son
Jack was also serving in the Air Force but
would eventually return to civilian life. Thus,
Bill and Dolly decided it was time to move to
Idaho to be closer to family, especially their
new grandkids. Retirement would allow more
time for fishing, hunting, and hiking with his
family as well as for the music he had played
professionally throughout his career as an
accomplished keyboardist.
Bill McHail doing the honors in re-enlisting his
younger son, Jack.
Bill began his second career in Boise, Idaho, as a nursing home administrator. Bill and Dolly later moved to
Meridian, ID, when Bill assumed the role of Administrator of the Idaho State Veterans Nursing Home at the
request of Governor Kempthorne. Even in his “retirement” Bill continued to serve his military brothers and sisters
to the best and maximum of his abilities.
Conclusion
At least two generations of AFMS warriors have gained knowledge and experience through medical readiness
training programs that stem from sources on which Bill’s invisible handprints still exist. During our lifetimes, we
hope our efforts have positive meaning and impact on those we serve; Bill’s life and contributions to the Air
Force, the other Services, and our allies should serve as a guide in achieving this goal. Throughout his career, Bill
never held back, constantly and consistently giving everything he had to the mission and those he served. He was
more than a “super leader” as he was once characterized by the commander of Wilford Hall Medical Center at
the time. Bill was an “uber” leader to whom all of us owe a debt of gratitude for his unwavering devotion to duty
and the very significant, long-lasting, and unparalleled impact he has had on medical readiness.
Epilogue
Bill suffered a stroke several years before his death on May 25, 2017, which left him incapable of playing the
music he loved. He eventually succumbed to cancer at the age of 77. Bill had been a devoted husband to his wife
Dolly for two weeks shy of 57 years, and he was fortunate to be surrounded by a loving family after serving our
Country for so long.
Born on the 4th of July 1939, Bill was fittingly laid to rest on 6 June 2017, when flags were flying across our
country in recognition of the 73rd anniversary of D-Day. It was a clear, crisp day when Bill received the Rite of
Christian Burial at Holy Apostles Church in Meridian followed by interment at the Idaho State Veterans Cemetery
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with full military honors by the Mountain Home AFB Honor Guard. I was honored and blessed to deliver the
eulogy for my best friend who truly was the epitome of an exceptional leader all future MSCs should strive to
emulate.
Footnotes
Other than cited works within the footnotes below, all direct quotations within this article were extracted from
official performance reports throughout Bill McHail’s most notable career.
1 Correll, J.T. (2019, May). Team B tackles the CIA. Air Force Magazine, 102(5),
https://www.airforcemag.com/article/team-b-tackles-the-cia/
2 Hess, S. (2000, January 21). Jimmy Carter: Why he failed. The Brookings Institute
https://www.brookings.edu/opinions/jimmy-carter-why-he-failed/
3 Correll, J. T. (2020, February). The Euromissile showdown. Air Force Magazine, 103(1),
https://www.airforcemag.com/article/the-euromissile-showdown/
4 Berry, F. Clinton. (1982, August). Project Warrior. Air Force Magazine, 65(8),
https://www.airforcemag.com/article/0882warrior/
5 Taylor, J. (2016, November 18). This month in AFMS history: Medical Red Flag begins.
https://www.airforcemedicine.af.mil/News/Article/1008715.
6 Kreisher, O. (2008, July). Desert One. Air Force Magazine, 91(7),
https://www.airforcemag.com/?s=Desert+One&o=1
7 Reagan, R. (1981, January 20). President Reagan’s Inaugural Address 1/20/81.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LToM9bAnsyM
8 Taylor, J. Ibid
9 Defense Medical Readiness Training Institute. Combat Casualty Care Course. https://health.mil/Training-
Center/Defense-Medical-Readiness-Training-Institute/Combat-Casualty-Care-Course
10 Collins, J. (2001). Good to great: Why some companies make the leap…and others don’t. New York, NY:
HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.
11 Defense Medical Readiness Training Institute. Ibid.
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IT'S ALWAYS NICE WHEN YOU CAN PLAY THAT 'GET OUT OF JAIL' FREE'CARD!
AN INTERESTING BIT OF WW2 HISTORY. TRUE STORY
Submitted by Lewis Sanders, Col (Ret), USAF, MSC, Past MSCA Chairman
Starting in 1940, an increasing number of British & Canadian Airmen found themselves as involuntary guests of
the Third Reich, and the Crown was casting about for ways and means to facilitate their escape. One of the most
helpful aids to that end is a useful and accurate map, one showing not only where stuff was, but also showing the
locations of 'safe houses' where a POW on-the-lam could go for food and shelter.
Paper maps had some real drawbacks -- they make a lot of noise when you open and fold them, they wear out
rapidly, and if they get wet, they turn into mush. Someone in MI-5 (similar to America’s OSS) got the idea of
printing escape maps on silk. It's durable, can be scrunched-up into tiny wads, and unfolded as many times as
needed, and makes no noise whatsoever. At that time, there was only one manufacturer in Great Britain that had
perfected the technology of printing on silk, and that was John Waddington Ltd. When approached by the
government, the firm was only too happy to do its bit for the war effort.
By pure coincidence, Waddington was also the U.K. Licensee for the popular American board game Monopoly.
As it happened, 'games and pastimes' was a category of item qualified for insertion into ‘CARE packages',
dispatched by the International Red Cross to prisoners of war.
Under the strictest of secrecy, in a securely guarded and inaccessible old workshop on the grounds of
Waddington's, a group of sworn-to-secrecy employees began mass-producing escape maps, keyed to each region
of Germany, Italy, and France or where ever Allied POW camps were located. When processed, these maps
could be folded into such tiny dots that they would actually fit inside a Monopoly playing piece.
As long as they were at it, the clever workmen at Waddington's also managed to add:
1. A playing token, containing a small magnetic compass
2. A two-part metal file that could easily be screwed together
3. Useful amounts of genuine high-denomination German, Italian, and French currency, hidden within the piles
of Monopoly money!
British and American air crews were advised, before taking off on their first mission, how to identify a 'rigged'
Monopoly set – by means of a tiny red dot, one cleverly rigged to look like an ordinary printing glitch, located
in the corner of the Free Parking square. Of the estimated 35,000 Allied POWS who successfully escaped, an
estimated one-third were aided in their flight by the rigged Monopoly sets. Everyone who did so was sworn to
secrecy indefinitely, since the British Government might want to use this highly successful ruse in still another,
future war. The story wasn't declassified until 2007, when the surviving craftsmen from Waddington's, as well
as the firm itself, were finally honored in a public ceremony. It's always nice when you can play that 'Get Out of
Jail' Free ‘card! Many of you are (probably) too young to have a personal connection to WWII (Sep. '39 to Aug.
'45), but this is still an interesting bit of history for everyone to know.
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TRIUMPH OF DIVERSITY: WHAT THE TUSKEGEE AIRMEN TAUGHT EVERYONE
Douglas E. Anderson, Col (Ret), USAF, MSC, DHA, FACHE
Today, the word “diversity” ranks high on leadership’s plate. Some say it is another buzzword for success while
others state it is related to equal opportunity. I doubt it’s another buzzword, nor should it be. To me, it’s a way
of life, a part of US culture and heritage, and means to continually improve any organization’s mission. A notable
group, the Tuskegee Airmen, taught everyone how to triumph and capitalize on diversity.
To illustrate, the combat deeds of black pilots in the 332nd Fighter Group, a.k.a. the Tuskegee Airmen in W.W.
II, serve as an unforgettable example of professions overcoming discrimination through persistence and ultimately
the triumph of diversity. In fact, the strength of will in these young black pilots proved decisive in W.W. II.
Between May 1943 and June 9, 1945, the Tuskegee Airmen compiled an enviable combat record. None of the
bombers they escorted were lost to enemy fighters. They destroyed 251 enemy aircraft via pursuit and attack and
won more than 850 medals. Their record was not without losses. Sixty-six Tuskegee Airmen were killed in action.
On an inspirational level, the respect and admiration earned by former Tuskegee pilot General Benjamin O. Davis,
Jr. won world renown. Unfortunately, much like many of their black compatriots and civilian counterparts, he
had to live against the social fabric of segregation and the broad canvas of war. However, through persistence,
he wanted to be judged on his character and deeds. He was. Gen. Davis triumphed by racking up a W.W. II
flying record second to none and eventually retired as a three-star general. In addition, many others like him
stood tall and stood proud of their accomplishments and contributions to our military way of life.
The military has come a long way on diversity since W.W. II. Although not perfect, and not without turbulence,
we can all be proud of hitting the target on diversity in the workplace as a force multiplier. As we celebrate
“Black History” month, a few reminiscent, but simple reminders on the value of diversity in the workplace will
help everyone:
1. Flying bomber “escort” with supervisor to assure them you support all equal opportunity policies
and will protect them when the odds are against them. You will encourage them to stand tall for
their ideas. Assure them their diverse perspectives count for something.
2. Engaging in fighter “pursuit” of diverse idea generation to get multiple solutions for a given
situation or complex challenge set before you. Constantly remind your personnel they are battle
tested, poised for the future and diversity is the natural ammunition for mission success.
3. Conducting ground “attack” operations to minimize the loss of individual spirit and
organizational rhythm when advised of any "intel" leading to discrimination or sexual harassment.
Ignoring it may only fuel it. Ignoring is the equivalent of blood on your hands. It could infiltrate
your entire organization without you knowing it until it’s too late.
4. Publicly reinforcing “character and deeds” through recognition. Allow your personnel to stand
tall and stand proud of their accomplishments in front of their peers regardless of their heritage or
physical characteristics.
Sadly, the number of Tuskegee Airmen is fading, however their persistence example will not. Diversity is not
new to the military and other organizations. While many inroads have been made by the triumph of diversity, we
can always improve for mutual benefit. The legacy of the Tuskegee Airmen and persistence of current leadership
in the recent past has resulted in a workplace environment where diversity has triumphed over race, color, gender,
religion, or creed. Today, we continue to build on that legacy. By standing tall, and standing proud, we will
continue to accomplish our organization’s mission through the triumph of diversity.
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TECHNOLOGY LESSONS LEARNED FOR TEMPORARY HOSPITAL DEPLOYMENTS
Jason Hall, Col (Ret), USAF, MSC, FACHE
https://www.healthcareitnews.com/blog/technology-lessons-learned-temporary-hospital-deployments
As the COVID-19 crisis forces hospitals to get
creative, a retired Air Force Colonel offers some
perspective on IT preparedness gained from
previous emergency medical deployments.
There is never good news when pandemics spread.
As we move to deploy remote and IT-driven
medical-care infrastructures, note that many
American institutions (government, military and
private sector) have already demonstrated
extraordinary proficiency in these areas. We’ve
done this before. We can do it now.
Make no mistake, the infrastructure needed to deliver world-class medical care is challenging to develop from
scratch. Whether in a pop-up field hospital or a repurposed existing building, the demands are wide-ranging.
These challenges run from setting up physical security, clean electric power and internet access, to deploying IT
solutions secure enough to protect privacy and provide the analytics required by epidemiologists.
But this is nothing new for our nation. The U.S. military regularly sets up field hospitals in a matter of hours or
days. These remote facilities have sterile surgical lab services that offer first-world care to our war fighters. I’ve
seen far-away patches of dirt quickly become bustling centers equipped with the impressive services found back
home.
Beyond the military, construction companies often set up remote operations with turnkey packages for housing,
power, internet, security and medical care. The same is true for utility companies responding to disasters, or NGOs
delivering humanitarian assistance. Frankly, our American expertise is unrivaled. Our nation’s disaster experts
are specialists, working their areas with a "spotlight focus" to deliver full-spectrum medical care. Since IT is so
central to care delivery – either in-person, remote or outpatient – let’s leave the physical infrastructure to the
experts for now and focus on the remote IT solutions and data collection needed in a time of a pandemic.
Lessons Learned
My experience in these situations has been instructive. I am a retired USAF Colonel and Healthcare Administrator
with more than 24 years of experience running healthcare facilities around the globe. I have deployed five times
to set up temporary healthcare facilities (Expeditionary Medical Support Hospitals) in remote locations, mostly
in the Middle East. Here are some lessons learned by me and my team.
Keeping it Simple. Keep IT simple. IT is provisional in nature. When the pandemic passes, and it will eventually
pass, the facility will be dismantled, and the temporary IT infrastructure will be absorbed into a permanent
framework. There’s not always a need for on-site costly servers when cloud solutions are available through
internet connectivity. If bureaucracy is involved in facility design – and it will be – leadership should resist
complicated, multi-layered IT solutions.
Technology Integration. Don’t engage in ad hoc systems integration. This is no time for freelancing. Seek out an
experienced technology-solutions provider to deliver custom solutions that extend enterprise IT capabilities to
remote users. The partner must have enterprise-class, remote-delivery experience, ideally with federal, state, or
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local government agencies, or the DoD. It will configure solutions to spec and deploy integrated storage, compute,
network, unified communications, wireless and security technology.
Sometimes that requires a ruggedized container; sometimes it’s just deployed over the internet. These solutions
enable secure collaboration and communications, no matter where field workers are located, putting enterprise IT
functionality at their fingertips. Clean Power. Uninterruptible power sources with backup are key in the field.
Today’s IT is very refined, but it still runs on old-fashioned AC power, which must come from a clean source.
Don’t overlook this, as unglamorous as it may seem.
Physical Security. Establish a physical-security plan. Adhere to it with military discipline. In a pandemic, when
panic is possible, or disruptors want to sow chaos, protect the facility and IT assets. Security solutions can range
from a simple lockable facility up to web-based cameras, video surveillance and AI-driven visitor analytics.
Prepare for BOYD. In all emergencies, workers will bring their own devices including all phone types, Apple
devices and PCs, tablets, wireless lab and medical equipment, and BI and analytical tools required by the
government. All must be accommodated, but that’s easy to do with browser-based access solutions.
Desktop-as-a-Service. Workers will be remote, yet still need access to the applications, data and file storage of
their regular enterprise systems. So, strongly consider Desktop-as-a-Service. DaaS solutions can be set up within
hours, allowing workers anywhere to leverage a secure cloud platform (allowing HIPAA compliance) that
delivers applications and desktops to any device with a browser. With DaaS, employees can use their personal
devices without security concerns or complicated software.
Collect Just What’s Needed. For electronic health records, collect only pertinent patient data for dissemination to
authorities or to allied healthcare facilities, e.g. a patient’s current condition, disease trajectory, whom they
contacted when contagious and a notification protocol for those contacts. (These guidelines should be set by the
commanding agency, such as the CDC.) Keep in mind that these pandemic operations are essentially a triage and
not meant to deliver a full range of medical care. Clear Understanding. Finally, keep all crisis information simple,
clear, concise and focused. Consider Microsoft Teams as a solution to set up “channels” and conversations that
are focused on specific tasks of conversation themes. Microsoft Teams can be invaluable for keeping appropriate
information in the hands of the right people in a focused, disciplined manner, while allowing access to a wide
range of communication and file-sharing tools. In the meantime, keep safe by following CDC hygiene protocols.
Take care of one another. We will soon look back at this time and be thankful we got through it with such
professionalism, fortitude and human decency.
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KAISER, CLINICA JOIN DIGNITY IN PROMOTING GREATER USE OF TELEMEDICINE https://www.bakersfield.com/news/kaiser-clinica-join-dignity-in-promoting-greater-use-of-telemedicine/article_ccb9db8e-72ab-11ea-809e-8f467ffa191b.html#comments
Note: Dave Womack (pictured left), Col (Ret), USAF, MSC has been
fighting the war on COVID-19 and employing his “lateral leadership” skills
to deliver telemedicine despite the obstacles ….
Two of Kern's most prominent health-care providers said Monday they are
looking to make greater use of telemedicine, joining a national acceleration in
the use of videoconferencing to connect doctors and patients without
unnecessary risks of infection during the pandemic.
Kaiser Permanente Kern County said it hopes to maximize its use of video and
audio appointments as it consolidates "face-to-face care" into fewer offices
locally. Separately, Clinica Sierra Vista announced its adoption of a virtual
platform using the popular videoconferencing software Zoom.
Kaiser and Clinica emphasized the idea is to limit physical interaction where
appropriate and that they will continue to see patients in person as necessary during the coronavirus emergency.
"We are doing a hybrid model. Depending upon the patient’s health need we determine if we can treat in person
or over telehealth," Clinica spokeswoman Cassandra Martinez said by email. "It is dependent upon the patient
and their medical condition."
DIGNITY LAUNCH
The moves follow Dignity Health Mercy and Memorial Hospitals' March 20 launch of a "virtual urgent care
service" free to anyone in the community experiencing mild to moderate symptoms that might be caused by the
new coronavirus. Dignity Health said in a news release anyone experiencing severe symptoms of respiratory
illness, such as a high fever or difficulty breathing, should call 9-1-1 or visit the nearest care site. It encouraged
people to call their medical facility in advance to notify personnel of any COVID-19 symptoms before arriving
in person. Telemedicine, or telehealth, makes use of technology that was being rolled out gradually, but which
suddenly makes more sense during the pandemic. Seeing a nurse or physician over the phone averts the need for
sick or vulnerable people to congregate inside the same building.
GREATER ACCEPTANCE
A 2019 physician survey found that adoption of telemedicine increased 340 percent in the United States between
2015 and 2018, but that at the end of that period, still only 22 percent of doctors had used telemedicine technology
to see patients. That rate is likely to jump during the pandemic. Last week's $2.2 billion federal stimulus makes
it easier for Medicare beneficiaries to get telemedicine and relaxes insurance-related restrictions on people using
virtual doctor visits. The measure also sets aside money to increase remote medical care available to veterans and
improve rural clinics' access to telemedicine.
KAISER CONSOLIDATION
Kaiser said by email the telemedicine push coincides with the closure of its medical offices at 3700 Mall View
Road and 4801 Coffee Road. Those operations with be folded into other locations, it said. It has also closed its
vision care services at The Marketplace and said optometry and ophthalmology services will now be provided
out of its Chester Avenue medical office building. During this consolidation, it said, members with in-person
appointments will be directed where to go for medical attention. It said its urgent care at the Stockdale Medical
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Office Building, 3501 Stockdale Highway, will remain open. Members requiring COVID-19 tests are being
directed to a drive-thru testing station, it said.
Members can order prescriptions online for mail delivery and that curb-side prescription pick-up will begin in
some locations next week, it said. It directed members to call its appointment and advice line, 877-524-7373, or
securely email their doctor with questions about ongoing care needs.
“I want to assure everyone Kaiser Permanente is open and providing care and quickly adapting to the
challenges generated by the COVID-19 virus," Kaiser's senior vice president in Kern, David Womack, said
in an emailed statement. "The safety and well-being of our members, the community and our physicians
and staff are our highest priority.”
CLINICA SYSTEM
Clinica, in its announcement, said people in Kern and Fresno counties can now get live attention 24 hours a day
with a medical provider certified in primary care, pediatrics, OBGYN, behavioral health or dental care. Regardless
of patients' ability to pay, Clinica said it will deploy its MyChart Virtual Visit with Zoom to provide chronic
disease management for diabetes, hypertension and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, as well as treatment
for acute conditions like sore throat, stomachache, earache and fever. "Medical providers can diagnose patients,
prescribe medications and suggest follow-up care when it is appropriate," Clinica said in a news release. "If
follow-up care or further testing is necessary, CSV Anywhere Care providers will refer patients back to their
regular CSV care team — or can recommend a new CSV physician when a new relationship is needed."
DIGNITY SERVICE
Dignity advised anyone wanting to use its service to visit www.dignityhealth.org/virtualcareanywhere or
download the Virtual Care Anywhere app or call 855-356-8053 and use the coupon code COVID19. It said
patients may have to wait half an hour or more to get an appointment, depending on call volume. Although the
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service has a fee of $35 per visit, the company said the fee will be waived for any patients who think they may be
experiencing COVID-19 symptoms.
LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT,
CAREER MANAGEMENT,
TRANSITION
AND
NEWS YOU CAN USE
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MY EXPERIENCE WITH LIFE-LONG LEARNING IN THE MILITARY
By 1st Lt Bin Ma
My name is Bin Ma, and I am a First Lieutenant in the United States Air Force (USAF). I have been a USAF
Medical Service Corps Officer for more than three years and am currently stationed at Travis AFB. The USAF
has given me fantastic memories due to the great people I have met and the wonderful life experiences it has
provided me. I want to share a little bit of my lifelong learning experience both before and after joining the USAF.
Unlike most Airmen, I was not born in the United States. I grew up in Wuhan, China –a city along the Yangtze
River. My grandparents were very well-to do before the Communist Revolution, owning large areas of land and
many shops. After China became a Communist country, my family was forced to give up everything to the
Communist government. This occurred over a number of years, before the Cultural Revolution started in 1966.
My parents had to restart our family with nothing. However, they instilled important ideals in me.
As a child, I was told, “If you have a goal in life – even if it has only a 1% chance to succeed – you should give
it 100% effort and let God decide if it is going to work or not.” I never forgot this. I have set goals for every stage
of my life. When I first arrived in the United States in 2008, I was full of excitement and anxiety. I had come to
the United States on a scholarship, attending Freed-Hardeman University in Henderson, TN. I was scared, as
English was not my first language; I had no friends nor family, and I was not familiar with the culture. I thought
about quitting often, but I always heard my dad’s voice in my head: “You have tried so hard to get this opportunity;
you should not quit easily. Surely you have more than a 1% chance to succeed; therefore, you should try 100%.”
With this motivation, I started working even harder. I wanted to prove to the school and to everyone that although
I was not born in this country and English was not my native language, I deserved to be as successful as any
American.
When I arrived in the United States, I could not imagine becoming a USAF Medical Service Corps Officer. I
started first as an enlisted Airman. I will never forget my military training instructor in basic training. She was a
Master Sergeant at the time. I had one conversation with her that had a big impact in my life. It was at the end of
the training. She called me into her office. I was extremely nervous. I thought I had done something wrong. But
to my relief, it was a nice conversation. She noticed that I was the only Chinese descendant trainee in her flight.
She asked me, “Trainee Ma, do you feel there is anyone in this flight who treated you unfairly because of who
you are?” I said, “No, Ma’am.” She looked at me and said, “If there is someone who treated you unfairly – it
doesn’t matter if it is a trainee or instructor – you need to let me know.” I said, “Yes, Ma’am.” Then she said, “It
is not easy to be in the military. I am a woman, but I made it this far to become a Master Sergeant. Do you know
why?” I said, “Because you are awesome?” She said, “No, because I fight for myself. You have the potential to
be a leader, but you need to learn that when you see things that are wrong towards you, you need to stand up and
fight for yourself. Then you will also find the confidence and ability to fight for your wingmen when they are in
tough situations.” I have remembered this and carried it with me ever since.
Before I came to the United States, people said, “America is a country of gold, and if you come here, you will
become rich.” After 11 years of living here, I don’t think America is a country of gold. It is a country of
opportunity. If you work hard, become well educated, and have strong drive and motivation, you can succeed.
America will give you the opportunity.
I worked extra hard, kept my scholarship, completed a master’s degree in ministry and a master’s of business
administration, and gained my US citizenship. My ten years of hard work led to many achievements that I am
proud of, including advanced degrees, US citizenship, and a great job in the USAF.
Life is a good teacher, and it has taught me valuable lessons. My early learning experiences and time in the United
States taught me not to give up on opportunity, even when challenges may seem daunting. This country may not
be a perfect country, but it is the best nation I know. It gave me a fair opportunity to succeed with my own hands.
My time at university taught me to never quit, be strong, and always fight for winning. My time in the military
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 33
taught me not only to fight for myself but to fight for others and to fight for what is right. It helped me to be a
better Airman, better Officer, and better Medical Service Corps member.
Eleven years of life in the United States has taught me that life is a process of learning, and one lesson I learned
was to never settle in my comfort zone. There are two kinds of birds in the sky: the eagle and the dove. The reason
the eagle is the king of the sky is because the eagle pushes its children out of the nest to survive by themselves.
The dove, however, always keeps its children close, and they grow up as a family. There is nothing wrong with
that, but if you want to succeed, the best way to gain experience is going through a tough situation. During the
learning process, there will be happiness and enjoyment as well as obstacles and pain. The obstacles and pain
provide the good lessons that help you mature.
Life is not always easy, but when we meet obstacles, instead of complaining about them, we can learn from them
and prevent the same difficulties from happening again in the future. If you can do that, you can succeed
anywhere.
A man can’t choose where he is born, but he can definitely choose what he wants to be. My early life experiences
were not pleasant, but I would not trade them for anything else. Without them, I wouldn’t be who I am today.
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A FOLLOWER’S PERSPECTIVE
By Col Alan Hardman
By the time leaders mature within an organization they have generally participated in a plethora of leadership
courses. These courses contain a mixture of conventional leadership theories along with anecdotal leadership
principles du jour. Phrases like “your ability to lead effectively got you here” convince some that a replication
of such abilities illuminates the pathway to success. However, followers experience the practical outcome of the
leadership principles implemented and draw different conclusions than the leader. Listed below are five
leadership principles explained from a follower’s perspective:
Leadership is a topic often written about, difficult to get right, and interpreted in the eye of the beholder. Are
the leadership principles you think you are implementing the same principles as the followers perceive?
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DISEASE CONTAINMENT PLAN TABLE TOP EXERCISE
By Col Jennifer Garrison
On 31 January 2020, Alex M. Azar II, Health and Human Services Secretary, declared a public health emergency
for the United States. This effort was to ensure our nation’s healthcare community can respond to the Novel
Coronavirus. At the same time, the 332 Air Expeditionary Wing (332 AEW) had been preparing for months for
a Disease Containment Plan (DCP) table-top exercise. The exercise was coordinated by 332 Wing Inspection
Team and the 332 Medical Group executed on 1 Feb 2020. This is the first time an exercise has occurred with
two co-chairs leading an exercise, a partnership shared with me as the 332 Expeditionary Medical Group CC and
the 332 Air Expeditionary Wing IG. All Group Commanders, Squadron Commanders and subject matter experts
showed up for the table-top exercise to be able to provide advice to ensure the DCP plan was executable. Our
goal was to ensure the Wing was armed to invoke emergency health powers necessary to respond to a public
health emergency and coordinate all emergency health power actions with Host Nation and Coalition partners.
The DCP exercise was designed to test the abilities of Wing personnel to respond and contain a potential
contagious disease outbreak. The six objectives were the following: 1) ability to respond to and care for patient
surge; 2) identify response options while continuing operational capabilities (Restrictions of Movement; Isolation,
Quarantine, Sustaining Flight/Maintenance Operations); 3) capacity for long term recover actions; 4)
strengthening local community and health support; 5) capability to conduct public health response and
epidemiological investigation; and 6) effectively demonstrate internal/external communication across the base.
My main responsibility was to lead the medical response capability working in coordination with the IG who led
the Wing response capability. Both of us designed a scenario that focused on a biological weapon where a
contagious disease was being dispersed to the public. This action caused many patients to be symptomatic and
worry patients that were asymptomatic. The greatest challenge in planning this exercise, was the amount of
strategic joint interoperability coordination needed between all the units on base working towards a unified plan
with many possible outcomes.
The scenario was a success as Wing leadership worked together successfully to activate and direct a mass
prophylaxis, medical surge capability while using disease containment strategies by standing up a quarantine
facility, isolation facilities, executing a mass prophylaxis point of dispensing (POD), and establishing restrictions
of movement while still meeting mission requirements. All Groups on base worked effectively together to
demonstrate a sense of urgency and provide long term remediation strategies to get the base back to normal
operations. A total win to ensure the base has an executable plan and understand what agencies bring to the fight!!!
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THE BRAVEST THING COL. RANDY HOFFMAN EVER DID WAS TO STOP FIGHTING
Michael M. Phillips, Wall Street Journal, 13 Dec 2019
Suggested Article for All to Read. Submitted by Craig Matsuda, Lt Col (Ret), USAF, MSC
Submitter’s Note: A friend shared this with me. It's about a Marine officer's
struggle with PTSD. You'll find it to be simple, straightforward, and brutally
honest. Men who are trained and indoctrinated to be almost indestructible
psychologically can be broken no matter how strong they think they are. War
isn't just hell, it can be a living hell for those who survive. It also tells me that
it's always up to the little people...the ones leaders send into battle. They
follow orders and do their duty like universal soldiers. They suffer most
when bad decisions are made, and, in the end, the only solace they have is
their comrades. It's like an ongoing therapy group which disappears when
war is over. Not surprising that they falter individually. Let's hope our
leaders remember what it means to the little people. America does stand for
freedom and is the world's standard bearer. It's up to us, but make sure the
little people have a voice, and we think very, very carefully before engaging
and deploying our military. It can exact a high price. ~Craig
An Extract for the Article: The Bravest Thing Col. Randy Hoffman Ever
Did Was to Stop Fighting
Enmeshed in Afghanistan for much of his adult life, the officer spurred the Marine Corps to confront the
traumas of America’s longest war. Marine commando Randy Hoffman’s plane took off from Kabul, climbed
over the jagged mountains and turned toward home. Somewhere down there was his tent, a piece of canvas
stretched across a pit he had carved into a high-altitude ridge. Randy had spent most of the previous 2½ years in
the mountains along the Pakistan border. Rugs covered the tent’s dirt floor. He had a wood stove for heat and
collected catalogs of farm equipment and RVs to remind him of home in Indiana. A metal thermos stored the
goat’s milk and cucumber drink delivered each morning by the mountain men who fought alongside him. He and
the Afghans would sit on a dirt bench, talking about poetry, faith and honor, and how to make it through the next
day alive.
Randy’s camp watched over the narrow passes and smuggling paths used by al Qaeda and Taliban militants to
sneak into Afghanistan from Pakistan. He kept mortars aimed at likely approaches. At times, he was the only
American for miles.
On Randy’s last trip down the mountains, a caravan of Afghan fighters in Toyota pickups escorted him on the
seven-hour drive to a U.S. base. From there, he caught a helicopter to Kabul and trimmed the beard he had grown
so he wouldn’t stand out as a target during gunfights. It was July 2005. As Randy headed home, he couldn’t
escape one thought. U.S. troops had been in Afghanistan for three years and nine months—as long as they had
fought in World War II. Yet the Afghan war wasn’t close to won.
On the flight home, Randy pictured the many villagers lost in combat, men he had come to admire for their
courage and strict sense of right and wrong. He thought about those left legless by militant bombings and now
facing a life ahead in mud-brick compounds perched on mountainsides. He turned away from the others on the
plane and cried. Since the first U.S. troops arrived in 2001, Afghanistan has become a generational war. The
youngest recruits stepping off the bus at boot camp today were born after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks that ignited
the war they may soon fight. Read more: https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-bravest-thing-col-randy-hoffman-
ever-did-was-to-stop-fighting-11576244128
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 37
PROMOTIONS
MSC MAJOR SELECTEES MSC LT COL SELECTEES MSC COLONEL SELECTEES
ALDAHONDO, RICARDO ANT ANGELOVA, RENI B BAKER, CORY L
BANGEREZAKO, CHRISTOPH BAIN, ALLISON N BURKS, FELICIA L
BERHEIDE, ADAM C BAKER, SCOTT A CALDERWOOD, LEA ANN
BROWN, RASHIDA J BERNABE, JOHN M FEWELL, JEFFREY S
CANTU, BILLY JACK BIGBIE, JOHN D HAMILTON, MICHAEL T
CARROLL, NICHOLAS W BUEHRIG, CRAIG M KERSTEN, MICHAEL J
CHECKETTS, RYAN L CERON, STEPHANIE A MCFARLANE, JOHN P
CLARENCE, DAPHNE MIGNO COTHREN, KRISTINE L MONIZ, CHARLES R
DONAHUE, JOSEPH WILLIA DELA CRUZ, MELISSA S NAYLOR, KATHY A
EARLY, DENNIS CORNELL EVANS, VANESSA V PAYETTE, JAMES W
ESTACION, MICHAEL A HAYNES, BRANDEE N RICHTER, JASON P
FERNANDEZ, IRENE MICHE HENDERSON, CARMELLA S RUSSO, AMY ELIZABETH
HARRIS, AMBER E HOLSTEIN, JAMES N SCOTT, VIRGIL L
HARTMAN, AMY HELEN LEONHARDT, ELISABETH E TOWNSENDATKINS, PAMELA
HOGAN, ALICIA DAWN LOPEZ, VIKKI LORRAINE WILLIAMS, STEPHENIE D
HUGHES, KELSIE LYNN MAZEY, BRETT J KELLETT, NATHAN T (BPZ)
HUIE, SEAN EDMUND MCMILLIAN, CHRISTOPHER
JOHANSON, BRYANT SCOBE MUNERA, ANDRES
KINDER, DEVIN S NEWBERRY, CYNTHIA L
KULIKOWSKY, THOMAS J OGREN, CHRISTOPHER
LAUGHRIDGE, JAMES L REESE, BARRY O
LAWRENCE, MICHAEL C ROSE, SUMMER A
LEAHY, SEAN P SHY, TAMMY S
LEE, BEN D TAYLOR DORSETT, GILLIAN
LOEBS, TODD G TOMLINSON, JENNIFER J
MALLORCA, KIMBEN MAGAD WISNER, GRANT W
MARGEVICIUS, EDGARAS BAH, CHEICK A (BPZ)
MCGHEE, MENYIKA L EL AMIN, AMBER J (BPZ)
MORSHED, CHRISTINE M
NICOL, SCOTT ANDREW
OGWELA, GEORGE O
PEELER, MARLON DARNELL
PHILLIP, JOSELINE
PIERSON, RICKY A
QUINN, BRIAN J
RENFROW, THOMAS F III
RIOS, GEORGE M II
RIZVI, BILAL
ROBOSKY, CHRISTOPHER J
RODA, CZAR JOSEPH
ROSA, FATIMA T
SAUL, GRANT C
SENGER, LINDSAY
SHAY, KRISTEN L
STANLEY, NICOLE
STEELE, MATTHEW GERALD
SUTER, SCOTT DAVID
SWAIM, JESSICA ANN
TURNER, ROBERT CRAIG
WALLER, SONATA R
WOOD, NOAH C
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 38
CELEBRATION
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 39
TRANSITIONS
Thank you for your years of dedication and service to Air Force and the Medical Service Corps!
January
February/March
Col Mike Roberts
Lt Col George Delaney
Lt Col Nathaniel Decker
Lt Col Kenneth Perry
Col Mary Ann Garbowski
Col Dan Lee
Lt Col Richard Keller
Lt Col Mary Ann Marquez
Lt Col Mark Overlie
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 40
VOLUNTEER TO BE PART OF THE MEDICAL RESERVE CORPS!
Submitted by Jody Williams, Lt Col (Ret), USAF, MSC and MSCA Historian Interviewer
Note: One organization which retired MSCs might consider is
the Medical Reserve Corps. Older MSCs or those in the high risk
due to medical conditions group may find tele-work/phone bank
opportunities providing valuable administration skills to their
local health departments. I just signed up to help my husband,
the Medical Director, in the Three Rivers Health District in
Virginia. I need to take some on-line courses and then I'll be able
to start working. ~Jody
About the Medical Reserve Corps: The Medical Reserve Corps
(MRC) is a national network of volunteers, organized locally to
improve the health and safety of their communities. The MRC
network comprises approximately 175,000 volunteers in roughly
850 community-based units located throughout the United States
and its territories. MRC volunteers include medical and public
health professionals, as well as other community members
without healthcare backgrounds. MRC units engage these
volunteers to strengthen public health, improve emergency
response capabilities, and build community resiliency. They
prepare for and respond to natural disasters, such as wildfires,
hurricanes, tornados, blizzards, and floods, as well as other
emergencies affecting public health, such as disease outbreaks. They frequently contribute to community health
activities that promote healthy habits.
Why Should I Volunteer? You've worked hard in your career to master a variety of skills – in medicine, public
health, safety, logistics, communications or a number of other areas. Volunteering with the Medical Reserve
Corps is a simple and effective way to use and improve those skills, while helping to keep your family, friends
and neighbors safe and healthy. For example, you may put those skills to use during an emergency, or while
providing some services for the most vulnerable members of your community. Volunteering can give the great
satisfaction of helping others. For many individuals, volunteering gives them a sense of purpose and meaning in
their lives. It helps to broaden their social networks, and that can have many positive effects. Volunteering
provides opportunities for social interactions with fellow volunteers while supporting an important activity in the
community. Interacting with others with a common interest is also a great way to create new relationships.
What Would I Do as A Volunteer? MRC volunteers train - individually and with other members of the unit -
in order to improve their skills, knowledge and abilities. Sometimes the training is coursework, and other times it
is part of a drill or exercise conducted with partner organizations in the community. Continuing education units
and credits are even available for some programs. Many MRC volunteers assist with activities to improve public
health in their community – increasing health literacy, supporting prevention efforts and eliminating health
disparities. In an emergency, local resources get called upon first, sometimes with little or no warning. As a
member of an MRC unit, you can be part of an organized and trained team. You will be ready and able to bolster
local emergency planning and response capabilities. The specific role that you will play, and the activities in
which you will participate, will depend upon your background, interests and skills, as well as the needs of the
MRC unit and the community.
Read more at: https://www.naccho.org/programs/public-health-preparedness/medical-reserve-corps
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 41
DEFENSE FINANCE AND ACCOUNTING SERVICE PROVIDING PAYMENT SERVICES OF THE
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE - MARCH 2020 AND DECEMBER 2019 NEWSLETTERS
or copy the link you’re your browser https://www.dfas.mil/retiredmilitary/newsevents/newsletter
March Newsletter
Director's Message
Welcome to the December 2019 Retiree Newsletter!
It’s Tax Season: Do you still need your tax
documents? - We are quickly approaching April 15th
and want to make sure you are aware of all the options
to get your tax documents.
Benefits of Using myPay - Instead of waiting on hold
to talk to a customer service representative, you can
use these convenient self-service options for getting
your retired or annuity pay information, and for
making updates to your pay account.
We're Making the School Certification Process
Easier - New easier, more convenient options for
school certifications.
The Latest News on the SBP-DIC Offset Phased
Elimination - Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
now available!
More New Form Tools – New Additions for
Annuitants - We have launched a few more helpful
form tools for Annuitants that include PDF checklists
and videos. Check out our forms page to see what’s
new!
Tip: Changing Bank Accounts for Your Pay?
Make sure you don’t miss a payment when you need to
change your direct deposit banking info. Start early!
News from Our Partners: Army Emergency Relief
AER kicks off 2020 Fundraising Campaign!
News from Our Partners: Air Force Assistance
Fund - Read about the USAF charities and how you
can donate.
News from Our Partners: Armed Forces
Retirement Home Offers Affordable Independent
Living for Eligible Veterans!
Now accepting applications for residency in 2020!
Click here for a PDF of the March 2020 Retiree
Newsletter - Download a PDF of the March newsletter
to read, print or share (right click and choose “Save
As” to save to your computer)
December Newsletter
Director's Message – Welcome to the Newsletter!
Tax Season is Here - We want to make sure you are
aware of all the options on getting your tax documents.
Making Forms Easier to Fill Out and Submit - This
year, we began rolling out new tools to help retirees
and annuitants fill out/submit forms easily/correctly.
What to Expect in Your Year-End Mail from
DFAS - For those of who still request postal mail from
us, here is what you'll receive in your year-end mail.
Check the SBP-DIC News Webpage for Info on the
SBP-DIC Offset Phased Elimination - we want to
make sure you know where to get info on how this
change may affect SBP.
2020 CRDP/CRSC Open Season - The 2020
CRDP/CRSC Open Season is January 1-31, 2020
2020 COLA/Pay Schedule - There will be a 1.6
percent Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA) for most
retired pay and SBP annuities and the Special Survivor
Indemnity Allowance (SSIA), effective Dec. 1, 2019.
Annuitant CEI Change - More authorized officials
can verify identify and sign the CEI to make it easier
for annuitants to submit this certificate.
Who to Contact for Pay/Benefit Questions - Ever
wondered if you are contacting the correct agency?
Read this to find out who to call about your question.
Convenient Options for Getting Pay Information
and Making Pay Account Updates - Instead of
waiting on hold to talk to a customer service
representative, you can use these convenient self-
service options for getting retired or annuity pay info,
and for making updates to your pay account.
News from Our Partners: TRICARE - Qualifying
Life Events - Beneficiaries can only enroll in or make
changes to their TRICARE health plan if they
experience a Qualifying Life Event (QLE)
News from Army Emergency Relief - For 78 years
AER’s mission has been to strengthen the financial
readiness of Soldiers and their families by providing
support to our comrades experiencing hardship.
News from Our Partners: Armed Forces
Retirement Home - Now offering residency
opportunities for married couples.
Click here for a PDF of the December 2019 Retiree
Newsletter
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 42
EVER STATIONED IN OR TDY TO KOREA? KOREAN DEFENSE SERVICE MEDAL
BACKGROUND: The Department of Defense
approved the Korean Defense Service Medal in
February 2004 to be given as recognition for military
service in the Republic of Korea and the surrounding
waters after July 28, 1954 and ending on such a future
date as determined by the Secretary of Defense.
CRITERIA: Individuals must have been assigned,
attached, or mobilized to units operating or serving on
all the land area of the Republic of Korea, and the
contiguous waters out to 12 nautical miles, and all
airspace above the stated land and water areas. To be eligible for the KDSM, personnel must have been
physically present in the stated areas for 30 consecutive or 60 nonconsecutive days, or must meet one of the
following:
• Be engaged in actual combat during an armed engagement, regardless of the time in the areas of eligibility
• Be killed, wounded, or injured in the line of duty and required medical evacuation from the area of
eligibility
• While participating as a regularly assigned aircrew member flying sorties into, out of, within, or over the
area of eligibility in support of military operations. Each day that one or more sorties are flown in
accordance with these criteria shall count as 1 day toward the 30 or 60 day requirement.
MEDAL DESCRIPTION: The KDSM shall be positioned above the Armed Forces Service Medal. Only one
award of the KDSM is authorized for any individual, regardless of the number of days over 30 (or 60), tours,
TDYs, or deployments served in the areas of eligibility.
AUTHORIZED DEVICE: None
WEIGHTED AIRMAN PROMOTED SYSTEM POINT VALUE: 0
Never Forget!
Send your Pictures and Articles Today!
Perform some CPR: Compliment, Praise, and
Recognize a Mentor!
History: Wanna be an Interviewer? Interviewee? [email protected]
ORLANDO 2021!!
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 43
MILITARY HOSPITAL TRANSFORMATION – INTRODUCING THE MARKET CONSTRUCT
Barclay Butler, Ph.D., MBA, assistant director of management at DHA,
explains the market concept to an audience of active-duty and civilian
conference attendees at the 2019 AMSUS Annual Meeting in National
Harbor, Maryland, Dec. 4.
The Defense Health Agency launched the most significant change to the
Military Health System in over three decades when in October it initiated the
congressionally directed transfer of authority, direction, and control of
military medical and dental facilities in the United States to DHA. That set in motion plans to establish a market-
based structure to manage the system’s 51 hospitals, 424 clinics and 248 dental clinics, with the first four markets
coming on line in early 2020.The DHA expects to create and certify a total of 21 large markets in major geographic
areas in 2020 and stand up a management office to oversee stateside hospitals and clinics not aligned to a market
such as those in rural areas or outside of major cities. In 2021, facilities in Europe and Indo-Pacific will transition
into Defense Health Regions.
Dr. Barclay Butler, the DHA’s assistant director for management who heads up MTF transition planning,
explained these upcoming changes at the 2019 annual meeting of the Society of Federal Health Professionals,
known as AMSUS, in National Harbor, Maryland, on Dec. 4. According to Butler, a market is a group of MTFs
working together in one geographic area, operating as a system to support the sharing of patients, staff, budget,
and other functions across facilities to improve readiness and the delivery and coordination of health services.
“It’s that geographic space encompassing all of the (health) care delivery organizations within that space,” Butler
said. For patients, a market gives them access to a larger network of providers and specialties, and centralized
day-to-day management will increase standardization of patient facing services, business and clinical practices.
“It’s really driving standardization across the organization,” Butler said. “Wherever we drive standardization in
health care, we always see an improved quality and lower cost.”
He explained the difference between DHA headquarters and the markets in terms of scope of responsibility. The
DHA, as a combat support agency, coordinates strategy and operational requirements with the Military
Departments and the combatant commands, collects and prioritizes those requirements against strategy, and
communicates and assesses performance. “The market offices are fundamentally execution offices,” Butler
explained. “They oversee the delivery of care, manage and administer the MTFs, and deliver readiness (within
the market). That’s an important construct for us, because the market becomes DHA’s unit of engagement.”
DHA currently establishes requirements for health care delivery at hospitals and clinics. The market office, once
established, tailors those requirements to their geographic region, both domestic and overseas, based on patient
population and hospital performance, to ensure compliance. Markets would also fully integrate MTF and
Purchased Care the TRICARE Health Program is often referred to as purchased care. It is the services we
“purchase” through the managed care support contracts through the TRICARE Health Plan, and work to create
healthcare networks with other federal facilities such as Veterans Affairs hospitals. “We have a very good need
to expand our partnerships with civilian hospitals out there. That’s what I want market directors to be doing,
looking at the entire care delivery system and how they can optimize care within that market,” Butler said.
Butler said he is excited about the potential success of these markets, bringing DHA closer to quality, patient-
centered care. “It’s about putting the patient at the center of everything we do,” Butler said. “Focusing on that
patient-centered approach to care results in better understanding of our patients, leading to improved quality of
life.”
For more information on the Military Health System Transformation, visit the MHS Transformation website on
Health.mil.
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SECARMY MEMO: MILITARY MEDICAL REFORM EFFORT RISKS COMBAT
HEALTHCARE QUALITY, R&D
Ben Werner, February 5, 2020 2:58 PM
U.S. Army officials worry a lack of planning and poor funding for a pending consolidation of how the Pentagon
manages military public health and medical research activities will result in dire battlefield consequences. The
Pentagon is in the middle of a decade-long effort to revamp the way military health care is managed by pulling
medical treatment, research and management under a unified command: the Defense Health Agency (DHA). The
DHA is still consolidating management of roughly 400 military treatment facilities (MTFs) while by the end of
Fiscal Year 2022, will run the military’s combatant command health care, defense-wide public health services
and medical research and development activities. The shift in control of military health research and development
and public health is supposed to be finished by the end of Fiscal Year 2022.
But Secretary of the Army Ryan McCarthy questioned the readiness for DHA to adequately assume these new
roles, according to a Dec. 19 memo he sent to the Department of Defense leadership, which was recently obtained
by USNI News. “I am concerned about the lack of performance and planning of both the Defense Health Agency
(DHA) and DoD Health Affairs with respect to the MTF transition,” McCarthy wrote. “Both have failed to
provide a clear plan forward with respect to policy and budget.”
A spokesperson for McCarthy did not respond to multiple USNI News requests for comment. McCarthy’s memo
does not call for reversing the planned changes. Instead, he questions whether the DHA, while trying to manage
the military’s existing health care system, is taking on too much responsibility by taking management of specific
programs away from the individual service branches. Specifically, McCarthy wants to halt plans to:
• Designate the DHA as a combat support agency
• Establish the DHA Research and Development
• Establish a command under the DHA that focuses on public health.
The lethality and the readiness of all DoD forces could be endangered if the transition to DHA of services currently
performed by each military branch continues at its current pace, McCarthy states. Medical research and
development will suffer, he says, by pulling this work away from the Army and its proximity to front line troops.
“As conditions during war may change rapidly, medical research and development is essential to respond quickly
and effectively to support warfighter capabilities and survivability,” McCarthy states in his memo. “If [the Army
Medical Research and Materiel Command’s] medical research and development assets are not left with the Army,
the Army’s ability to fulfill its Title 10 responsibilities and integrate medical capabilities with warfighting systems
for service members will be degraded and at risk.”
The military’s development of freeze-dried plasma is a current example of what McCarthy describes as the close
alignment of military research and development efforts are with combat forces. The Army started working with
Minneapolis-based Vascular Solutions in 2014 to develop freeze-dried plasma. The company, now owned by
Teleflex Inc., is currently working to get its plasma product approved for use by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration. At the same time, the Marine Corps started using freeze-dried plasma in combat situations since
2017. The Marines were so anxious to use the product critical for saving lives in combat, they received special
permission to use French-made freeze-dried plasma until the U.S.-made product is approved.
Under the new system, McCarthy worries more administrative layers will separate researchers from the
warfighters in the field, adding delays to the process fielding and developing new medical technology.
Lawmakers have already shown some unease over the pace of the Pentagon’s military health care changes.
The Fiscal Year 2020 National Defense Authorization Act put the brakes on a proposal to cut military medical
billets until the Pentagon made a stronger case for supporting the reductions and until DHA finished taking over
the administration of all military treatment facilities.
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 45
The Department of the Navy’s Fiscal Year 2020 budget request called for cutting about 3,100 medical billets as
part of the larger Department of Defense plan. Up to 5,300 medical personnel positions were to be cut during the
course of the five-year Future Years Defense Program.
The Navy’s medical community leaders at the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (BUMED) started voicing
concerns about possible medical services funding cuts since November 2018, according to a memo viewed by
USNI News. The BUMED memo predicted money saved from cutting medical personnel would be used to
increase Navy lethality. If the Department of the Navy has any concerns about the pace of DHA changes, officials
are not saying so publicly.
“Each service has a distinct mission and distinct goals with respect to the Military Health System transition. It
would be inappropriate for the Department of the Navy to comment on another department’s memo,” Lt. Cmdr.
Derrick Ingle, spokesperson for acting Secretary of the Navy, told USNI News in a statement.
“The Secretary of the Navy is focused on the readiness and well-being of all sailors and Marines. That means
ensuring they receive the best care possible, and that they remain healthy and ready to deploy. While the ongoing
transformation of the Military Health System will bring challenges, this is an opportunity for the Department of
the Navy to refocus on medical readiness while transitioning the administration health care benefit to the Defense
Health Agency (DHA). The Department will continue to approach these reform efforts with deliberate planning,
solid analytics and sound decision-making,” Ingle said
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Military's Plan to Cut 18,000 Medical Staff Should Be Shelved During Pandemic, MOAA Says
The Military Officers Association of America has joined growing calls in
Congress for the Pentagon to scrap or at least postpone plans to cut staff at
military hospitals and send retirees out into the community for health care
during the novel coronavirus epidemic.
The Defense Health Agency's plans appear to be especially misguided at a
time when local hospitals and clinics are being overwhelmed in certain parts
of the country with COVID-19 patients, MOAA said in a statement.
"With medical capacity in extraordinary flux across the civilian health care
system, it becomes increasingly prudent to officially halt all proposals to transition military families and retirees
to civilian providers," it said.
There was no immediate response from the DHA, which has been putting in place a long-range plan to take
over management of the 51 military hospitals and 400 clinics worldwide in the Military Health System, while
cutting nearly 18,000 medical billets. The facilities have until now been managed by individual military service
branches. The plan would also transfer retiree patients and their families into Tricare community networks, also
managed by the DHA, with the intent of having the military health care system focus more on active-duty
troops and readiness of the force, according to the Defense Department.
"The unprecedented challenges associated with the COVID-19 pandemic demand all plans to reduce MHS
direct care system capacity cease now; they can be reconsidered at a later date," MOAA said in the statement.
A March 14 letter to Defense Secretary Mark Esper, Rep. Ross Spano, R-Florida, urged that the restructuring
plan for two military health care facilities in his Tampa Bay district be put on hold. The current plan would
"involve transitioning nearly 30,000 [military retiree] enrollees from their current providers" into a civilian care
sector in flux because of coronavirus, Spano said.
The coronavirus outbreak, with a total of more than 163,539 confirmed cases and more than 2,860 deaths in the
U.S. as of midday Tuesday according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has already forced the
DoD to revise numerous plans as travel restrictions were imposed, joint military exercises were canceled or
postponed, and the military was increasingly called upon to bolster the civilian response to the crisis.
The plan to cut medical billets and transfer retirees to Tricare was approved by Congress as part of the National
Defense Authorization Act of 2017. DHA officials have since said that the implementation will be "conditions
based." Karen Ruedisueli, director of health affairs at MOAA, said the pandemic's crisis conditions should give
the DoD pause. "It's very clear the nation is turning to DoD for assistance" in combating the threat, she said.
“We can’t just hit the pause button on MHS reform – we need a full stop. It doesn’t make sense to think we can
pick up with these MTF and billet cuts after the immediate COVID-19 threat is over. Those plans were based on
a pre-coronavirus assessment of medical readiness requirements. Any future MHS reforms must consider
lessons learned from this pandemic and potentially a new vision for DoD’s role in national medical
emergencies.”
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 47
IMPORTANT
MSCA MEMBERSHIP
UPDATES AND INFORMATION
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 48
ATTENTION DUES PAYING MEMBERS!
ITS NOT TOO LATE!
2020 DUES PAYMENT OPTIONS AND
2021 DUES INCREASES
Decision: During the 2019 Reunion business meeting, the Board of Directors (BOD) and members approved
2020 ANNUAL DUES PAYMENT OPTIONS AND 2021 DUES INCREASE. While the 2021 annual dues
increase amount has not been determined, the approved 2020 PAYMENT OPTIONS are provided below:
Category 2 Year 5 Year 7 Year Active duty in the grades of 05-07 and retired members
$40 $100 $140
Active duty, drilling
guardsmen and reservists in the grades of 01 – 04
$30 $75 $105
Rationale: Several factors drove the decisions:
1. Many members suggested the payment options as an improvement over the annual process for a small
amount; similar to what other Associations offer members.
2. Provides annual dues paying members a transition period.
3. Provides members a savings who take advantage of the offer as
the 2020 pending annual dues amount increases.
4. Aligns with the 2-year complmentatry membership for HSA
Students (previously BOD approved).
5. Reduces the administrative process burden to process small
amounts of dues payments.
6. While not decided, annual dues could be increased anywhere from
10-15%. This is required to offset increased overheard costs. It
will represent the first dues payment cost increase since the 1990s.
7. Life time membership is still available but are subject to change
with the anticiapated 2021 annual dues increases.
Other:
1. New members will automatically receive electronic versions of the newsletter.
2. Member promotees and retirees in the grade of 04—06 may receive a 1-year complementary membership
but must notify the membership team within 90 days of the effective date.
3. Non-member promotees and retirees in the grade of 04—06 may receive a two-year memebrship for the
price of an annual membership but must notify the membership team within 90 days of the effective date.
Send Inquiries to [email protected]
Life Time Memberships Are
Always Available
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 49
THE BRIGADIER GENERAL DONALD B. WAGNER PERPETUAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Editor’s Note: While the Brigadier General Don Wagner Scholarship Fund is a separate and distinct function
and organization from the MSC Association, we most certainly endorse and support its purpose and fund-raising
activity. As such, we will be including information about the Fund on our web site. In the meantime, Col (ret)
Steve Meigs, President of the Fund, has provided the following information about the Fund.
The Brigadier General Donald B. Wagner Perpetual Scholarship Fund was chartered in Texas in 1982, as a 501
(c) 3 non-profit corporation in honor of the general's contributions. He was the first Air Force Medical Service
Corps Officer to achieve general officer (or flag) rank. The corporation was formed exclusively for charitable,
educational purposes providing scholarship grants to children of United States Air Force Medical Service Corps
officers (Active, Reserve, Air National Guard, Retired) who are enrolled in graduate or undergraduate programs
in health care management or related fields of study at an accredited institution of higher learning.
Status Update: I finally have good news regarding the non-profit status for the Fund. After almost 3 ½ years of
back and forth with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), The Brigadier General Donald B. Wagner Perpetual
Scholarship Fund’s status as a 501 (c) 3 tax-exempt, public charity has been reinstated retroactive to the date of
revocation – May 15, 2010. Based on this decision, we also filed for and received verification of tax-exempt status
in Texas. A huge debt of gratitude is owed the law firm of Clark Hill-Strasburger and attorneys Katy David and
Brooks Caston for their assistance in petitioning the IRS for resolution of this issue. Their persistence,
professionalism, and expertise were critical to this outcome.
What does this mean? Because our non-profit status lapsed, we were not able to legally conduct fund-raising
activities as a charitable entity. With the status reinstated, we can conduct fundraising activities and donors can
deduct contributions according to IRS rules. With the recent changes in the tax code, this may not be a big deal
for most individual contributors, but it will make a difference for corporate donors. This status also qualifies the
Fund to receive other tax-deductible bequests, devises, transfers, or gifts under IRS rules.
What’s next? Thanks to the generosity of several individual donors and the Medical Service Corps Association,
the Fund has continued its mission of providing scholarships to children and grandchildren of United States Air
Force Medical Service Corps officers. This will continue and I will discuss that more in the next paragraph. We
also intend to re-start fund-raising activities in the future, including the annual golf tournament. Last, we will be
expanding the Board of the Fund. Currently, the Board consists of myself, Col (r) Randy Borg and Col(r) Adolphe
Edward. Our revised Bylaws indicate the Board may consist of no fewer than three, but up to seven directors.
Several individuals have volunteered to serve on the Board in the last three years, but we decided to wait until the
IRS issue was resolved before making any changes. I will be contacting those who have volunteered their service
and will have an update regarding this for the next newsletter.
Call for Scholarship Applications: Children and/or grandchildren of members of the United States Air Force
Medical Service Corps (MSC) officers (Active, Reserve, Air National Guard, or Retired) who are enrolled in
graduate or undergraduate program in health care management or related field of study at accredited educational
institutions of higher learning are encouraged to submit an application for a Brigadier General Donald B. Wagner
scholarship. The Board anticipates awarding three scholarships in 2020 of at least $1,500.00 each. Interested
students and their qualifying sponsor must complete the application found in this newsletter and mail it to:
Brig Gen Donald B. Wagner Scholarship Fund, PO Box 780833, San Antonio, TX 78278
To be considered for a grant award for this academic year, completed applications must be received by
Jun 30, 2020. Questions should be directed to Col (r) Steve Meigs at [email protected].
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SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATION
The Brigadier General Donald B. Wagner Perpetual Scholarship Fund
Applications may be submitted any time during the year, but to be considered for calendar year 2020 must be
received no later than June 30, 2020. Send your application and support material to: Brigadier General
Wagner Scholarship Perpetual Scholarship Fund, PO Box 780833, San Antonio, TX 78278.
APPLICANT INFORMATION
NAME: ____________________________ DATE OF BIRTH: ________________________
ADDRESS: __________________________ TELEPHONE NUMBER: __________________
___________________________________
QUALIFYING SPONSOR INFORMATION
NAME: ____________________________ RANK: ________________________________
ADDRESS: _________________________ STATUS (AD/RET/RES/SEP): ______________
_________________________________ PHONE NUMBER: ______________________
RELATIONSHIP TO APPLICANT: _______________________________________________
ACADEMIC INFORMATION
HIGH SCHOOL (Complete this section only if you will enroll in college/university in Fall 2020)
NAME OF SCHOOL, CITY, STATE ________________________________________________
GRADE POINT AVERAGE (PLEASE INDICATE SCALE) _________________________________
CLASS STANDING/TOTAL CLASS SIZE _____________________________________________
EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES AND OFFICES HELD (YOU MAY ATTACH YOUR RESUME IN
LIEU OF LISTING ACTIVITIES) ________________________________________________________
COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY (Complete this section if currently enrolled in college/university or if you are
entering a graduate or post-graduate program)
_______________________________________________
NAME OF SCHOOL, CITY, STATE ________________________________________________
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GRADE POINT AVERAGE (PLEASE INDICATE SCALE) _________________________________
SEMESTER/QUARTER HOURS COMPLETED (CIRCLE ONE) ____________________________
MAJOR AREA OF STUDY: ______________________________________________________
EXPECTED GRADUATION DATE_________________________________________________
EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES AND OFFICES HELD (YOU MAY ATTACH YOUR RESUME IN
LIEU OF LISTING ACTIVITIES) ________________________________________________________
FINANCIAL DATA
HOW WILL YOUR OTHER TUITION/FEES AND EXPENSES PAID?
__________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________
OTHER DATA
PLEASE INCLUDE THE FOLLOWING WITH YOUR APPLICATION
- LETTERS OF ACCEPTANCE TO COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY (IF A HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR)
- COPY OF HIGH SCHOOL TRANSCRIPT (IF A HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR)
- MOST RECENT COLLEGE TRANSCRIPT (if applicable)
- A ONE-PAGE LETTER ADDRESSED TO THE SCHOLARSHIP COMMITTEE DESCRIBING YOUR
ACADEMIC AND CAREER GOALS
- A ONE-PAGE LETTER FROM YOUR QUALIFYING SPONSOR RECOMMENDING YOU FOR
CONSIDERATION FOR THIS GRANT
APPLICANT’S STATEMENT
I certify I meet eligibility requirements for the application for a Wagner Scholarship Fund Grant. I understand
that the scholarship award is a competitive process, and that awards are made on a best qualified basis.
If awarded a grant, I will faithfully pursue degree attainment in Health Administration/ Management or a related
field.
I understand that in the event I fail to satisfactorily complete degree requirements, maintain good academic
standing, or if I withdraw from school, I will be required to return the scholarship funds to the Scholarship Fund
within three months.
If awarded a scholarship, I will provide my social security number to the Wagner Scholarship Fund for Federal
tax reporting purposes.
My signature below also authorizes publicity release in event of an award.
______________________________ ________________
SIGNATURE OF APPLICANT DATE
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LAST CALL FOR COMMITMENT TO EXCELLENCE AWARD NOMINATION
(RETIREE) FOR CALENDAR YEAR 2019
DOUG ANDERSON COL (RET), USAF, MSC, FACHE, BOARD MEMBER
The period for this award is for service AFTER the person’s retirement from active duty/Guard or
Reserve, so please focus your narrative accordingly. We are making the process as simple as possible too.
Submit nominations, 2 pages maximum to this email: [email protected]. Suspense date: 1 Mar
2020. Format:
Name of Person Submitting Nomination:
Email:
Date joined the MSC Association: _______________ (if you don’t have this information, it will be entered)
Nominee Information:
Rank:
Last Name:
First Name:
Middle Initial:
Describe the nominee’s contributions after he/she retired from the Air Force, including Guard/Reserve,
in one or more of the following areas:
− MSC Association (offices held, committee membership, etc. – be specific)
− USAF Medical Service Corps
− USAF Medical Service
− Military Service members or veterans
Describe how the nominee is a consummate team player, and role model for others in the Association
and Medical Service Corps:
Describe the individual’s community and public service following retirement:
Additional directions:
1. Keep the primary submission to less than 2 pages. Y
2. Use continuation sheets as necessary (place the nominee’s rank and name at the top center of each
continuation page and number them).
3. Only one nomination for each person.
Nominators may provide letters of support from other Association membersin lieu of duplicate nominations. If
letters of support are used, the nominator is responsible for inclusion.
Ready to upgrade to Lifetime
Membership? Switch to the
E-Eversion of the Newsletter?
… It’s Easy! Send Inquiries to:
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 53
HONOR ROLL A/O 1 APRIL 2019
CHARLIE BROWN, COL (RET), USAF, MSC
2020 MONTHLY ADDITIONS TO HONOR ROLL
MONTH DATE OF
REPORTED GRADE FIRST NAME LAST NAME DEATH
JANUARY Lt Col James R. Bellor (LM) 3-Dec-18
Capt Joseph V. Balesky (M) 21-Dec-19
FEBRUARY Maj Theodore H. Williams LM) 1-Oct-19
Maj Julius J. Budelis (LM) 31-May-19
Capt Andrew K. Duncan (LM) 10-Jan-18
MARCH Capt Raymond L. Smith (NM) 19-Mar-20
Capt Kristine
Willingham (S of LM
Col Paul Willingham) 24 Mar 20
LM=Life Mbr M=Mbr @=Corps Chief S=Spouse NM=Non Mbr
OBITUARIES
Kristine Goryanec Willingham / Date of Death: March 24, 2020: Kristine
Goryanec Willingham, 48, United States Air Force Major retired, passed away
peacefully on Tuesday, 24 March 2020 at her home where she was surrounded by
loving family. Kristine was a graduate of the University of New Mexico and a proud
member of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. She was commissioned an Air Force
Officer and entered active duty in 1995. She graduated from the Uniformed Services
University of the Health Sciences Registered Nurse Anesthetist program in 2007 and
was awarded the Board of Regents Graduate School of Nursing Award, the highest
University honor a graduating student can receive. Kristine also served as a vital part
of the Air Force Critical Care Air Transport Team and was a veteran of Operations
Enduring and Iraqi Freedom, touching the lives of injured Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen
and Marines in their time of greatest need. She is preceded in death by her sister,
Lisa Gravitte; uncle, Jasper N. Edmundson; her grandparents; and stepfather, Jack
Ward. She is survived by her husband, Colonel (ret) Paul A. Willingham of Wichita,
KS; mother, Ruth Ann (Dennis) Pipal of Sunset, TX; father, George Thomas Goryanec of Albuquerque, NM;
aunt, Vicky Edmundson of Poplar Bluff, MO; cousins, Matt, Jay, Lorrie, Tim, Chelsea, and Leeza; sister-in-law,
Renee (Dr. Steven) Hamilton of Knoxville, TN; nieces and nephew, Alexis, Jessica and David Hamilton. Private
services will be held at a future date with planned inurnment at Arlington National Cemetery. In lieu of flowers,
the family requests donations be made to the Kristine Willingham Fund, an endowment that provides a memorial
scholarship through the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists (AANA) Foundation using the online giving
link: http://app.mobilecause.com/form/vt_mQQ?vid=6cxse
Please write “Kristine Willingham Fund” in the gift comment box.
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 54
Help the USAF MSC Association with your story (i.e., current experiences,
opinion or commentary, deployment, special project, leadership advice, family
support, lessons learned), pictures, links, other artifacts. We can’t make this
stuff up! Many of the stories are being submitted to the AF and AFMS history
offices as we speak! More importantly, regardless of your status, member or non-
member, retried or active duty, PLEASE provide our current and future generation
of MSCs the history, context, lessons, insights, advice and contributions YOUR
STORIES. That’s what legacy is about – capturing the wisdom, insights, and
advice of those who have been there, done that! Membership Categories and
Working Ideas on Requested Topics for the Historian and Newsletter!
1. Spouses: Summary of your spouse’s career from YOUR eyes or perspective;
what you miss most about the USAF; experience as a spouse in all eras, family support experiences, faith,
travel or retirement advice; career options, opportunities, and challenges; experience with installation key
spouse program; special story of family resilience, overcoming tragedy and setbacks, dual spouse challenges;
tips and advice on PSCing.
2. Newly Assigned Personnel: Share your first 1-2 years of experience and perspectives as a new and aspiring
MSC. What do you like most about the MSC? Who’s helped you and how? What do you wish you had paid
more attention to in HSA?
3. Experienced Flight Commanders: Share your first 3-5 years of experiences as flight commander—skills
applied? Skills you wish you had more of? What would you have done differently? Who’s helped you and
how? Or, a deployment experience.
4. Staff Officers at all Levels and Positions (current and past): Challenges and transformational leadership
associated with a system wide project, initiative, or team you involved with. Could be the proposal,
formulation, implementation, and evaluation stages.
5. Special Assignments (current and past): Summarize value proposition and career broadening experiences
of serving in a unique assignment: WH fellowship, recruiting, COCOM, IHS, Joint, Homeland Security,
MEFPAK, Lead Agent, OSD, OASD/HA, IG, USHUHS, Joint Staff, special duty in an AOR during an
operation, Air Staff, …. Other?
6. Group and Squadron Commanders (current and former): Summarize the first 6-8 months--what went
right? How did you handle your first crisis? What surprised you? What leadership competencies did you
employ the most? What would you have done differently?
7. Administrators (SGA) (current and former): Summarize first 6-8 months; discuss tips and experiences on
leading sideways – across silos, with installation organizations, and the community. What leadership
competencies did you employ the most? What would you have done differently?
8. Transitioning MSC: personal p summary of your “bitter sweet” plans, aspirations, and concerns. Could
include an alternative, new, and exciting career paths or adventure.
9. Retired MSC, Engaged in 2nd+ Career: Transition experiences, differences and similarities in environment,
leadership skills, advice to transitioning MSCs.
10. Retired Retired: special unique story on service in the WWII, Korea, and Vietnam era (during and post),
establishment and evolution of the Air Force Medical Service (AFMS) and USAF MSC—TRIMIS, DHP,
PPBS, TRICARE, CHAMPUS, and CHAMPUS Reform changes; summary of experiences of the early days
of SGA roles and operations; special projects involved with impacting the AFMS and USAF MSC today
11. Everyone: Deployment experience. Faith based stories and experiences, EWI , AFIT, Fellowship
experiences, commentary on Defense Health Agency (DHA) oversight, 2 SQ, Sq Revitalization, and
AFMRA efforts; suggested articles, subscriptions, links and videos of interest for all the above categories,
suggestions to help the MSCA improve service, value of affiliation, community involvement ….
Membership … Services … Culture! (404) 500-6772 www.MSCassociation.org Page: 55
THE BACK STORY ….. What a treat it was to spend six weeks with
Allison aboard Royal Caribbean’s Radiance of the Seas. I must admit
I was a bit concerned as we were boarding, having never seen such a
procession of walkers, scooters and wheelchairs anywhere and
especially not boarding a ship. A good lesson about never giving up,
regardless of issues that might hold others back!
The ship held about 2,100 passengers and nearly 1,000 crew, so like
any small city, you get to know people pretty quickly. Everyone we
met, on board or off, was gracious, friendly, and truly seemed to be
happy we were there! Many of our fellow passengers were veterans
but did not talk a lot about their military experiences. Whether it was
a major city in the east of Australia, or a small-town port in rural
Australia or New Zealand, we always felt safe and welcomed. After
the first three weeks of circumnavigating Australia, I was getting a little concerned that we had not yet seen a
single kangaroo! Got more than enough of them during the second three weeks, and koala bears and herds of
wallaby.
We left Sydney northbound on 5 February, for the Gold Coast, Brisbane, The Great Barrier Reef and Cairns
(which is pronounced “Canz” by Australians). As we left Cairns and angled northwest, the temperature started
As we come off of a near six-week cruise, circumnavigating the continent of Australia and visiting the fiords
(sounds) and ports in New Zealand, I was thinking about the name COVID-19 and wondering what happened
to COVID-1 through 18? Turns out there was no 1-18… just 19 (as I later learned). Our cruise suffered only
one minor bump in that we were prohibited from leaving the ship at the port of Bali because Indonesia
was suspected of under-reporting the incidence of this disease. Small bump for us, but a big deal for the
Indonesian crew members who had been looking forward to visiting family and friends that had traveled to
Bali to see their family members serving on the ship. No crew members were allowed off the ship either. And
what a crew it was! The Royal Caribbean Radiance of the Seas where we spent nearly six weeks and its crew
were in a word, “FABULOUS”!
You mean stories like these? ☺ …. YES, AND!
JIM MORELAND, COL (RET), USAF, MSC ESCAPES THE
COVID-19 ATTACK WHILE ON A CRUISE
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to rise substantially. Since it was March, we were just at the end of their summer, and when you look at just how
big Australia is relative to the USA, Sydney to the northern tip of eastern Australia is even further than going
from Miami to New York City, except it gets warmer as you go north in that hemisphere. By the time we hit
Darwin, it was well above 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Things started to cool down as we started south again, and by
the time we docked at Perth, we started seeing more cooler, cloudy weather all the way back east to Melbourne
(one of the most beautiful cities we have ever visited), often referred to as the “garden city”. From Melbourne,
further south to Hobart, Tasmania (a beautiful island by-the-way) where we visited another animal sanctuary that
rehabilitated injured and abandoned kangaroos, Tasmanian Devils, Wombats and birds. From Tasmania we sailed
to New Zealand where the weather was very wet and cloudy, but undeniably beautiful in the sounds (fjords) and
cities. Fabulous waterfalls in the sounds that seemed to fall a thousand feet in places. From Wellington, NZ, we
sailed between the north and south NZ islands, directly back to Sydney, reaching port on March 14th. We flew
home via LAX on the 15th, missing by about 12 hours, the beginning of worldwide shelter-in-place orders. So we
were very fortunate. We might just have to do the Perth to NZ portion again, but a little earlier in their summer,
and hope for sunnier weather! Looking forward to our next adventure.
Ed. Doug’s Note: Meanwhile, while Jim is out cruising, he’s assured everyone he is safe and still planning
the 2021 Reunion
Jim, Jim, you ok? That’s
1962!
Where are we staying
again?