ASDHA
A Message from the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs
Colleagues,
This month marks my first full year as Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs – and what a year it’s been! With your help, we’ve achieved a great deal in the past twelve months and I want to pause to thank all of you for your support and the effort you make every day to respond to emerging issues while doing the hard work of strategic thinking and long-range planning we need.
I wanted to get a first-hand understanding of our MHS operations around the world and the only way I know how to do that is with in-person visits and candid conversations with our people at all levels. I’ve been privileged to visit a variety of MHS operations from military treatment facilities and labs to academic partners. Without exception, I benefited from honest discussions and blunt feedback, and I thank you for that. Also without exception, I’ve come away from each site visit with a stronger sense of pride in the caliber of the people in the MHS.
Next month, we’ll gather at the MHS Conference, the first one in more than a decade. I look forward to interacting with many of you, and to laying out the road ahead to fulfilling our new MHS Strategy, starting with stabilization, as outlined in the memo from the Deputy Secretary of Defense. I hope you’ve taken the time to read both documents, and come prepared with questions, comments, and insights.
Finally, I’d like to take this chance to welcome our newest leader, Rear Admiral (ret.) Susan M. Orsega, our new Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Services Policy and Oversight. Ms. Orsega comes to us from the Department of Health and Human Services, where she served as principal adviser to the Assistant Secretary for Health and the Surgeon General on all U.S. Public Health Service policies and activities. She’s been a leader in public health for more than thirty years and her strong interagency relationships and professional expertise will help us tremendously as we move forward. Please join me in making her welcome!
Very Respectfully,
Lester
Lester Martínez-López, M.D., M.P.H.
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs
A Message from the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs
Colleagues,
Happy New Year! I hope that you all enjoyed the holiday season and got some much deserved rest and relaxation.
As we enter this new year, I will tell you that 2024 will be a pivotal year for our organization, as we build on the accomplishments of last year, particularly the completion of the MHS Strategy and the issuance of the MHS Stabilization Memo from the Deputy Secretary of Defense. These documents are closely related, as the goals of MHS stabilization are tied to the successful implementation of our strategy. We will be talking about these efforts regularly, asking for your help in achieving our objectives and communicating those achievements.
In this first month of the year, I’m asking you to familiarize yourself with the strategy https://health.mil/Reference-Center/Publications/2023/12/15/MHS_Strategic_Plan_FY24_29 and the Stabilization Memo. Strategic decisions about programs and resources should be made through the lens of the four strategic goals outlined in the strategy: Take Care of Our People, Stabilize the MHS, Modernize the MHS, and Integrate MHS Capabilities.
Implementation of the MHS Stabilization Memo is underway with a task force chaired by Dr. David Smith, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, Health Readiness Policy and Oversight. The task force’s first job is to jointly develop business rules for determination, resourcing, manning, and accessibility to medical forces to manage and balance risks.
I’ve spent the past ten months visiting our people across the country and around the world. I have listened to your concerns and am determined to keep listening, to deliver improvements, and to make sure you understand what the strategy and stabilization efforts mean to you and what you can do to move us forward. Stay tuned.
Very Respectfully,
Lester
Lester Martínez-López, M.D., M.P.H.
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs
A Message from the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs
Colleagues,
I am deeply concerned by the news from Israel over the past few days, as I am sure you are, too. As I follow reports of the continuing conflict and take in the horrific images of war, I can’t help but think of our solemn responsibility for readiness. What’s happening now in Israel is a stark reminder that peace can turn to war in the blink of an eye, that vigilance must be constant, and that we must be ready, at all times, in all places, to carry out the defense of our country.
What this means for us is a renewed understanding of and emphasis on readiness – the readiness of our forces to meet the physical, psychological, and emotional demands of conflict and the readiness of our medical providers to take care of them. Everything we do is oriented to that mission, that sacred trust those who serve our nation have placed in us.
I renew my commitment to all of you and to all we serve to bring the very best I have to this job every day, and I know I can count on you to do the same. The challenge is real and is not going away. We must be even more resolute in every decision we make and every action we take to help our people be stronger, healthier, and ready for whatever we must face.
Very Respectfully,
Lester
Lester Martinez-López, M.D., M.P.H.
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs
2024 Military Health System (MHS) Conference Save-the-Date!
We are excited to announce the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, Dr. Lester Martinez-Lopez, is hosting the 2024 Military Health System (MHS) Conference! The conference will be held Monday, April 8 – Thursday, April 11, 2024, at the Oregon Convention Center, 777 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd, Portland, Oregon. The theme of the MHS Conference will be “The Future of Military Medicine – Integrated, Innovative, Ready”.
The 2024 MHS Conference will present a robust agenda for DoD and MHS leadership communities. This event will highlight current and future-state priorities, communicate lessons learned, and provide a forum for collaboration and unity of effort.
The MHS has gone through significant changes over the last decade and continues to do so. This event is meant to bring leadership together for an exchange of ideas and encourage transparent information-sharing to increase mutual awareness of capabilities, limitations, and challenges. Please send an e-mail to mhs-conf@health.mil, if you have any questions, want to update your contact information, or want to be removed from this mailing list. We look forward to seeing you in Portland in April!
MHS Conference Management Team