Author: Joel Schofer, MD, MBA, CPE

Navy American College of Physicians Governor Position

Posted on Updated on

CDR Mark Tschanz is turning over as ACP Governor in 2023, so there is an opening for a new Governor starting Spring of 2022. Any Internists interested should direct questions to the incumbent, CDR Tschanz (contact is in the global).

Applications are due by COB 5 FEB 2021 and should include Letter of Intent (LOI), CV, and military bio.

Female Physician Leadership Course Nominations – LCDR(s) to CDR

Posted on Updated on

Who: Female Medical Corps Officers from O4 select to Junior O5

What: Interactive female leadership development

When: 3-6 MAY 2021 – note that the deadline for application submission is 31 JAN 2021

Where: Virtual, but must have command no-cost/permissive TAD orders

Why: Deliberate development of female leaders

How: Submit application package to both CDR Wendy Arnold and CAPT Charmagne Beckett (contacts are in the global)

Here is a document that provides more details:

SG Message – Toward a More Perfect Union

Posted on Updated on

Esteemed Colleagues:

On the day before he died, in the speech given in support of striking sanitation workers in Tennessee, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr retold the good Samaritan story. He said that those who refused to stop for the wounded man on the road asked, “If I stop to help this man, what will happen to me?” – but the good Samaritan instead asked, “If I do not stop to help this man, what will happen to him?”

Service is the action of helping or doing work for someone. There is no greater honor and no greater reward than service. And today, there is no greater need.

As your Surgeon General, I am honored to serve alongside our selfless Sailors and civilians who are dedicated to be part of something greater than oneself. We serve to protect and defend America and the country’s national interest.

Whenever a Sailor or Marine goes, Navy Medicine is there, ready and engaged. We are there rendering medical aid in austere locations, caring for our shipmates and their families at military hospitals, developing vaccines to protect our forces against disease, and providing humanitarian assistance around the world. Service is the very bloodline of our One Navy Medicine family.

Today, four of our Rapid Rural Response Teams (RRRTs) – comprised of 24 nurses and respiratory technicians – are providing essential medical care to COVID-19 patients from the Navajo Nation in Arizona and New Mexico. Our scientists are conducting pioneering research on viral transmission, and at military treatment facilities and alongside Navy piers, we are providing vaccines against a deadly disease to protect the Force and our fellow Americans. These are just a few examples of the thousands of good actions Navy Medicine demonstrates every day.

Dr. King devoted his life to serving others and advancing equality, social justice, and opportunity for all. He challenged Americans to participate in the never-ending work of building a more perfect union. We are living through difficult times – with a global pandemic, social turmoil, economic hardships, and political strife all straining our country. Recognizing that our Nation has yet to reach its full promise is not an admission of defeat, but a call to action. As our Joint Chiefs reminded us this week, American citizens trust us to protect and defend our nation in accordance with the Constitution and I thank you for embracing this responsibility.

I challenge each of us to continue to foster an environment of dignity and respect for everyone. In our Navy, we have individuals from many different cultures, ethnicities, and histories. We must recognize this advantage and include the broadest possible spectrum of people and perspectives. Generating success as a team means going beyond merely understanding the unique perspectives of different people and cultures – understanding is too passive. Achieving top performance is enhanced when we tap into the energy and capability of an actively inclusive team.

As we mark Dr. King’s 92nd birthday this holiday weekend, let us each remember that we have much more to gain from peaceful dialogue, orderly discourse, and civility towards each other. Navy Medicine remains committed to the principles of mutual respect and understanding that Dr. King espoused. Now, perhaps more than ever, they are the cornerstones of the Navy’s Culture of Excellence and an important contribution to our nation’s ongoing effort to create a more perfect union.

With my deepest gratitude, SG

Bruce L. Gillingham, MD, CPE, AOA

RADM, MC, USN

Surgeon General, U.S. Navy

Chief, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery

How to Easily Figure Out the Dollar Value of Staying In vs Getting Out of the Military

Posted on Updated on

Here is a table from the 2019 Statistical Report on the Military Retirement System:

Just by looking at this table, you can very easily learn a few things including:

  • The dollar value of staying in for 20+ years and receiving a retirement pension.
  • The incremental value of staying on active duty for additional years once you are retirement eligible.

The Dollar Value of a Military Pension

Let’s say you are an O-4 who has the option of resigning/separating at the 12 year mark. You think if you stayed in until 20 years you could make O-5, but you’re not sure just how valuable that military pension really is. You can figure that out by looking at the table above, and you can see that a 20 year O-5 pension has a dollar value of $1,458,837. You can reduce this value by about 20% ($1,167,070) if your are in the Blended Retirement System and would only get 80% of the full pension. That is what you’d be giving up by getting out at the 12 year mark as an O-4 and not staying in long enough to get the pension.

The Value of Staying Additional Years Once You are Retirement Eligible

Let’s say you are a 20 year O-5 who is weighing an extra 4 year commitment, and you think you could make it to O-6 if you stayed until 24. What is the dollar value of sticking around when it comes to your retirement pension?

We already mentioned that a 20 year O-5 pension was worth $1,458,837. If you stayed in another 4 years and made O-6 the value of your pension would have increased by $526,879 to $1,985,716, an average of $131,720 per extra year you stuck it out.

The Bottom Line

There are a lot of factors to consider when you are making the decision to stay in or get out, but by looking at the table above you can pretty easily quantify dollars values associated with:

  • Staying in for 20+ years and receiving a retirement pension.
  • The incremental value of staying on active duty for additional years once you are retirement eligible.

SG Conversation with ADM (ret.) Stavridis, 1100 on 15 January 2021

Posted on Updated on

Good morning all,

I hope this message finds you well today.  And I hope you can assist in spreading word about an event the SG will be having tomorrow that is open to all BUMED personnel.

Tomorrow at 1100 the Surgeon General will be speaking with ADM (ret.) James Stavridis on Facebook Live as part of the “Conversations with the Authors” Series.   The topic of conversation will be  Stavridis’s books “Sailing True North: Ten Admirals and the Voyage of Character” and “Sea Power: The History and Geopolitics of the World’s Oceans” and their application to Navy Medicine.   As a Facebook Live event this will be open to the Enterprise and we encourage all BUMED personnel to watch on the BUMED Facebook site.

A flyer about the event is here:

A link to the previous installment of the series (Dr. Muhammad Zaman, author of “Biography of Resistance: The Epic Battle Between People and Pathogens” can be accessed through the following link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EI2EYhtatJU).

Thank you.

Very Respectfully,

André

André B. Sobocinski

Historian/Publications Mgr.

Communications Directorate (M09B7)

Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (BUMED)