Author: Joel Schofer, MD, MBA, CPE

Throwback Thursday Classic Post – Basic Anatomy of a FITREP

Posted on Updated on

There is a HUGE knowledge deficit in the Medical Corps about FITREPs, which is sad when you consider that they are probably the most important document in our Naval careers.  To address this deficit I created this video podcast.  In 43 minutes you’ll know just about everything that you need to know about FITREPs.  This material is based on about 10 lectures I collected over the years and is consistent with the 2015 update of the FITREP instruction.

Grab a FITREP to look at or start up NAVFIT98a and write your FITREP as you watch the video because it will be much easier to follow along this way.  In addition, here are the slides to download and view and the page with all my FITREP resources:

Basic Anatomy of a FITREP

Joel Schofer’s FITREP Prep Page

U.S. Navy Surgeon General Visits Europe to Discuss Readiness and Medical Health Care Transition

Posted on Updated on

By Petty Officer 1st Class John Kotara, U.S. Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery Public Affairs

WASHINGTON (NNS) — Vice Adm. Forrest Faison, Navy surgeon general and chief, U.S. Bureau of Medicine and Surgery discussed the future of Navy Medicine, and plans to prepare medical personnel for the next fight, while visiting Rota, Spain, and Naples and Sigonella, Italy, July 17-23.

Faison, accompanied by Force Master Chief Hosea Smith, Hospital Corps director, spoke with leaders and Sailors at Naval Hospital Rota, Naples and Sigonella about important changes occurring within the military health system, in particular the transition of all military treatment facilities (MTFs) to the administration and management of the Defense Health Agency (DHA).

“These changes that are occurring,” said Faison, “will allow Navy Medicine to shift our focus from managing buildings and health care benefits to ensuring its people, doctors, nurses, and hospital corpsmen have the skills and experience to keep Sailors and Marines, healthy, ready, and on the job. This transition will allow us to promote Navy Medicine readiness across the world.”

During the multi-day trip, Faison had the privilege to conduct facility tours, admiral’s calls and leadership briefings.

“There is no greater responsibility than then to provide a highly trained medical force that is ready and prepared to save the lives of our nation’s armed forces,” Faison said. “We had a 97 percent survival rate coming out of Iraq and Afghanistan, the highest in all our history, and we had every conceivable advantage, including uncontested air superiority, aeromedical evacuation on demand, seamless communications, and our hospital corpsman, the most important asset on the field.”

Faison explained these advantages may not exist in the next conflict if adversaries are near-peers who can also project sea power. That’s why Navy Medicine has to be prepared for a very different threat and challenge.

Partnerships that prepare Navy Medicine’s Sailors for future conflicts can build on the successes of existing ones, such as Hospital Corpsman Trauma Training, a Navy Medicine program where hospital corpsman have gained hands-on trauma experience at John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County, and the University of Florida Health Jacksonville.

“We must show that we are worthy of the trust that is placed in our hands,” said Faison. “We are the ones that care for the 1% of individuals that freely volunteered to uphold our freedom and democracy of this land, and we will do whatever we can to help these military members carry on, in order to defend this country and return them home to their loved ones.”

Navy Medicine is a global health care network of 63,000 personnel that provide health care support to the U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, their families and veterans in high operational tempo environments, at expeditionary medical facilities, medical treatment facilities, hospitals, clinics, hospital ships and research units around the world.

July Message from the Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs

Posted on Updated on

MHS Team,

The Military Health System (MHS) continues implementing FY17 and FY19 NDAA-directed reforms – planning and executing the most significant changes to the military medical enterprise in decades. These reforms are looking at different areas of the MHS, from the way we manage healthcare services, to the infrastructure and staffing capacity of Military Treatment Facilities (MTFs), to the broader manpower structure enabling the best possible support to the readiness and lethality of the Department and the National Defense Strategy. While each reform area is distinct, together, they will modernize our approach to military medicine to establish an even more effective, integrated system of health and readiness to support the warfighter and care for the patient.

FY17 NDAA Section 702 will enhance the effectiveness of the MHS by transitioning administration and management of the MTFs from the Military Departments to the Defense Health Agency (DHA). In essence, we are merging four separate healthcare delivery systems into one, consolidating for ease of beneficiary access to high-quality care and standardizing processes and procedures. This will ensure a consistent patient experience at any one of our MTF’s – from appointment scheduling to streamlined referral processes, with standardized performance management systems to monitor readiness, health, access, quality, safety, and cost – and, in turn will enhance clinical competency to ensure a ready medical force and a medically ready force. Last October, eight large MTFs and their associated clinics transitioned to DHA. October 1, 2019 is another major milestone as more MTFs will come under DHA.

One of the provisions in NDAA 2017 requires the Department to conduct a review of the Direct Care System to ensure that MTFs are operating in support of their missions as training platforms for military medical personnel and supporting the medical readiness of operational forces. This review is in its final phase and has included on-site evaluations of select MTFs and assessments of the capabilities of local health care systems to absorb care from the MTFs. Conclusions from these evaluations are being reviewed by senior leaders who will make recommendations to the Secretary of Defense for identification of MTFs for transition to increase or decrease capabilities. The Department will submit a report to Congress outlining recommended MTFs for transition. Facilities designated to transition would begin in FY2020 and could extend through FY2022, depending on transition and local healthcare system expansion timelines. Prior to any change, Congressional notification will be completed in accordance with statute. This reform effort is distinct from MTF consolidation; we are looking at the structure and needs to advance the MHS’s highest priority: to ensure medical forces are ready to support combat forces downrange, and that we continue to build and sustain a world-class health care system geared toward ensuring a medically ready force.

Finally, in order to best support the National Defense Strategy, the Department is comprehensively analyzing medical manpower requirements to meet operational requirements. The Military Departments have recommended force changes based on manpower needed to achieve operational needs. Health Affairs, the DHA, and the Military Medical Departments continue to work closely, developing staffing plans that would achieve the highest readiness and quality of care standards for the warfighter and patient. This effort illustrates the MHS’s inextricable link to the Department’s priorities guiding our strategic direction: getting the military medical force structure right means optimizing personnel, resources, and most importantly, building lethality and support of the force in lockstep with the National Defense Strategy.

While MHS reform brings incredible change, it’s not our only area of focus. We also have new tools at our disposal to deliver on our mission. Next week, I’ll be joining hundreds of uniformed, civilian, contract, and vender experts at the Defense Health Information Technology Symposium (DHITS) in Orlando to talk about how the new MHS GENESIS electronic health record advances readiness, with preparation underway for deployment at Naval Air Station Lemoore, Travis Air Force Base, Army Medical Health Clinic Presidio, and Mountain Home Air Force Base this fall. MHS GENESIS remains a key priority, enabling easier monitoring and response to patient health through an enhanced set of tools to capture the readiness of MHS personnel and service members. The EHR also will improve the way we serve our beneficiaries, whether military members, retirees, or family members.

It’s a productive time for the MHS, and I am grateful for your continued commitment to deliver on our mission. Earlier this week, I joined the 120th Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) conference in Orlando to speak with beneficiaries about some of the major MHS transformation efforts underway. I reinforced that while change can be difficult, it also provides the MHS great opportunity to identify innovative ways to more effectively carry out our responsibilities. No matter the organizational reform or change developments to the way we do business, our work together as a team is setting up the future military medical enterprise for success. Keep up the great work!

Tom

Get $125 from Equifax Data Breach Settlement and Finance Friday Articles

Posted on Updated on

If you want to find out if your personal info was affected by the Equifax Data Breach, you can go to this website:

https://eligibility.equifaxbreachsettlement.com/en/eligibility

Further info is available here:

https://www.ftc.gov/enforcement/cases-proceedings/refunds/equifax-data-breach-settlement

At a minimum, you can get $125 or free credit monitoring if you were affected. It takes a minute to file a claim if you were affected.

Here are this week’s articles:

4 Ways Your Fear of Loss Impacts Your Finances

Balancing the Need to Take Risk

Different Ways to Make Five Million Dollars in Real Estate

Financial Freedom in Ten Reliable Steps

How Time-Consuming is Investing in Real Estate?

Life Goal: To Lose a Million Dollars

Pay to Play – Divide Your Wealth Into Physical and Social Wealth Components

Should We Employ Our Own Kids? (and How Much to Pay Them)

The Financial Benefits of Residential Solar

The Optimal Portfolio

The Problem With FIREing At 4% And The Need For Flexible Spending Rules

The Tale of Two Doctors: The First Paycheck

The Work Required to Behave in the Markets

We Are Often Frugal, But Rarely Cheap

What is the Best Asset Allocation for Retirement?

What You Need to Know about Fundrise and DiversyFund

Which Assets Should You Spend First in Retirement?

Who Should Go For PSLF As An Attending Physician?

Why A Physician Should Work Full-Time

Why military retirees may no longer have to wait 180 days to start a job at DoD

You May Have Longer Than You Think to Invest For Retirement

You Need an Investing Plan

Throwback Thursday Classic Post – Could a Master’s Degree Get You Promoted?

Posted on Updated on

When discussing why they failed to promote, one of the more common reasons that officers give is that they were unable to get a leadership position. When I ask them how they prepared themselves for these positions and what they did to improve their chances of getting one, they often don’t have much to say. Frankly, they didn’t do anything “extra” or above and beyond their normal duties to prepare for and get a leadership position.

Don’t be one of those officers.

The recipe for promotion is fairly simple. Superior performance in leadership positions leads to early promote (EP) fitreps, which leads to promotion. As promotion gets more difficult, the competition for leadership positions is likely to increase, and officers need to find a way to differentiate themselves from the crowd, increasing the chance they’ll get leadership positions. Obtaining a master’s degree can be one of the things that will distinguish you from other physicians and can dramatically increase the chances that you are competitive for career advancing positions.

What Kind of Degree Should You Consider Getting?

This depends on your career goals. If you want to become a leader in research or global health engagement, an area of increased focus in the Navy, you probably want to get a Master in Public Health (MPH) or similar degree. If you want to become a residency or fellowship director, a master’s degree in adult or medical education would fit the bill. If you want to become an operational leader, attending a war college would make sense. And if you want to become a clinical administrator or pursue executive medicine, obtaining a management degree, such as a Master in Business Administration (MBA), Master in Medical Management (MMM), or Master in Healthcare Administration (MHA), would make sense to me.

How Can You Get a Master’s Degree While on Active Duty?

There are many ways you can do this, but the most common include:

  1. Complete a fellowship that includes a master’s degree. Some fellowships either include or have the option of obtaining a MPH, such as the Global Emergency Preparedness and Disaster Response Fellowship. I also know of multiple officers who asked the Graduate Medical Education Selection Board for an additional year of fellowship to obtain a degree or simply for permission to obtain a degree alone. What are the chances this will be granted? Well I’m sure the chances change from year to year, but they are zero if you don’t ask.
  2. Complete the distance learning Executive MBA from the Naval Postgraduate School. This is how I got my MBA for the cost of books alone, and I think the program is excellent. You have to go to Monterey for 1 week at the beginning of the 2-year program, but after that all classes are held on-line.
  3. Apply for the Navy Career Intermission Program and take time off to get a degree.
  4. Attend a war college. Intermediate colleges are for officers who are O4 or below, while senior college is for O5 and above. If you’re interested, contact your Detailer.
  5. USUHS offers a Master in Health Professions Education.
  6. Pay for it yourself and do it in your free time on-line or in person. One program to look into is offered by the American Association for Physician Leadership (https://www.physicianleaders.org/education/physicians/masters). By taking some CME you can then enroll in various patient safety and management degrees that are all physician focused. The on-line University of Massachusetts healthcare focused MBA that they offer is the most reasonably priced MBA that I could find that is accredited by the top business school accreditation body. If you want a fast MBA (but pricey), look into the University of Tennessee Physician Executive MBA program (http://pemba.utk.edu).

While committing to a master’s degree program will take major time and effort, that is the point. It is a well-recognized way to demonstrate to the Navy that you’ve made a serious commitment to your professional development and could go a long way toward giving your next interview for a leadership position.

Interested in Becoming a Military Medicine Ambassador?

Posted on Updated on

Are you or do you know someone who might be interested in becoming a Military Medicine Ambassador?

The Uniformed Services University has recently established a Military Medicine Ambassador (MMA) Program. The mission of this program is to make known and communicate the opportunities available to practice medicine as a uniformed physician trained through the Health Professions Scholarship Program or the Uniformed Services University.

Military Medicine Ambassadors (MMAs) are “field” representatives of military medicine who provide information to interested pre-medical students and medical school applicants about medical school officer accession programs and the Uniformed Services University. MMAs will have the opportunity to visit their alma maters and/or universities near their hometowns, duty stations, or current medical practices.

Although many MMAs will be HPSP graduates, USU alumni, active duty service members, retirees, or separated service members; prior military service is not a requirement or pre-requisite for assignment. Anyone who has a sincere interest in military medicine, to include pre-medical and medical students, may be enrolled within this program.

One of the goals of this program is for MMAs to develop relationships with pre-medical programs, pre-health advisors, military recruiters, and interested applicants by sharing their personal experiences and knowledge about life as a uniformed physician. Volunteers will be able to participate as their schedules permit, and they will be provided with all the information and training necessary to participate in these activities. MMAs will also be able to utilize this work for their professional resume or curriculum vitae in support of academic promotions at USU.

If you are interested in learning more about this program, you can register at the following link: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/K9LZ6JY or contact Commander Robert Liotta directly, whose contact info is in this flyer about the program.

Finance Friday Articles

Posted on Updated on

Here are this week’s articles:

A Lesson in Portfolio Correlations

A Primer on Socially Responsible Investing

Are TIPS Cheap?

Bid for a higher military pay raise fizzles amid partisan fighting in Congress

Capital gains are a good thing

Don’t Retire To Something. Retire On Something.

Focusing on earning more, rather than spending less, is a mistake

Getting Used?

Global equity investing: The benefits of diversification and sizing your allocation

How a Taxable Brokerage Account Can Be as Good or Better Than a Roth IRA

How To Negotiate Lower Advisory Fees

How young troops could be getting hosed on their military education benefits

Humanitarian Medical Mission — A Cure For Burnout?

Live Now or Save for Later: The Now or Later Fallacy

Our Real Life Experience with Real Estate Investments

Partial FIRE: The Solution to Your Problems?

Solomon on Money

The Financial Burden of a Rare Cancer

VA Announces Yellow Ribbon Schools for 2019-2020 Academic Year

Why I Adopted the “Hell Yes” Policy

Work Less Now or Work Less Later, What’s Better?