BRAC Will Facilitate Medical
Transformation, Official Says
Since 02-02-06
From: Waspscpo@aol.com [mailto:Waspscpo@aol.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 02, 2006 4:08 PM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: BRAC Will Facilitate Medical Transformation, Official Says
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Feb2006/20060202_4082.html
By Sgt. Sara Wood, USA
American Forces Press Service
February 2, 2006
WASHINGTON, Feb. 2, 2006 – The results of the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure
process have created opportunities and challenges for the military community at
large, and specifically the military medicine community, the BRAC Commission's
chairman said here today.
Four BRAC actions affect large medical facilities, at least four more affect
medical research and management activities, and seven outpatient hospitals will
convert to clinics with ambulatory surgery capability, Anthony J. Principi said
at the State of the Military Health System 2006 Annual Conference.
The BRAC-mandated changes will help the military health system become a more
modern, joint force capable of dealing with the changing environment the
military is operating in, Principi said.
"The worlds of national defense and of medicine are changing ever more rapidly
and ever more profoundly, and just as chance favors the prepared mind, change
favors the prepared organization," he said. The decision to realign Walter Reed
Army Medical Center here into a multiservice facility upset many people because
they perceived it as the loss of a facility with rich heritage and a world-class
reputation, Principi acknowledged.
But the BRAC commission agreed the change will "transform a legacy -- an aging
medical infrastructure -- into a premier, modernized joint operational medicine
platform," he said. Another example of transformation is the decision to
establish a joint medical facility at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, and to convert
Wilford Hall Medical Center on Lackland Air Force Base, also in the San Antonia
area, into an ambulatory care center, Principi said.
BRAC addressed many infrastructure issues, but the fundamental issue that must
remain the top priority for health care leadership is providing quality care for
servicemembers and their families, Principi said.
"Those men and women look to you - the health care professionals in this room -
to provide them and their families with the medical care they need - care our
nation provides to them in satisfaction of an obligation reciprocal to the one
they assumed to us when they took their oaths of office," he said. Change will
be painful at first, as it is in all organizations, Principi said, but it is
necessary to keep up with a society and an environment that will continuously
evolve.
"Over the long run, the status quo and a dynamic environment are incompatible,"
he said. The BRAC results will make the military health system able to adapt to
this changing environment and continue to be relevant to its beneficiaries,
Principi said.
"If the decisions of the BRAC commission facilitate your ability to respond to
those changes, and to meet the health care needs of America's servicemembers,
then I can count as well spent the hours the commission committed to assessing
and analyzing DoD's proposals," he said.
Related Site:
Base Realignment and Closure
http://www.defenselink.mil/brac/
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)