Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Browser Cache

This website has recently undergone changes. Users finding unexpected concerns may care to clear their browser's cache to ensure a seamless experience.

Defense Health Agency’s Top Noncommissioned Officer ‘Aims High’

Image of Defense Health Agency’s Top Noncommissioned Officer ‘Aims High’. Ghana Armed Forces Brig. Gen. Nii Adjah Obodai, commander, 37th Military Hospital in Accra, Ghana, presents U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Daniel Fisher, Defense Medical Readiness Institute’s Academic Support Branch noncommissioned-officer-in-charge, with a gift of appreciation for establishing a tactical combat casualty care training site in March 2022. (Photo: Terry J. Goodman)

When Daniel Fisher walked into the U.S. Air Force recruiting office in Sylva, North Carolina, nine years ago, he was lost with no sense of direction or purpose. After graduating Swain County High School in 2007, he was taking college classes and driving a truck when he decided to enlist. He never looked back.

Defense Health Agency Noncommissioned Officer of the Year U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Daniel Fisher competed in the Office of the Secretary of Defense’s Noncommissioned Officer of Year competition in Washington, D.C in May 2023. The winner will be announced at a ceremony in August 2023.

Fisher said the award was confirmation he is doing the right things and the Defense Medical Readiness Training Institute mission is valued throughout DHA.

“I believe what we do is the tip of the spear in medical training,” said Fisher, DMRTI’s Academic Support Branch noncommissioned-officer-in-charge. “That’s why I’ve thrown all of myself at improving our courses and to train the best instructors in the Department of Defense. Winning this award affirms that I’m putting my energy in the right places and that the work must continue.”

DMRTI, a division within DHA’s Education and Training Directorate, provides military personnel, active duty and reserve, medical and operational training to prepare them to support health service support missions around the globe.

U.S. Air Force Master Sgt. Douglas Rozelle, DMRTI’s senior enlisted advisor, said when Fisher is given a task, it will be done to the highest standard possible.

“He is on his way to being a gift to the medical Air Force Specialty Codes and the Air Force,” said Rozelle, DHA’s 2022 Senior Noncommissioned Officer of the Year.

“He has the gumption, drive, character, and belief in people to take our AFSC to new heights.”

Fisher, a subject matter expert in pre-hospital medicine and an affiliate faculty member at the National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians for tactical combat casualty care and prehospital trauma life support, was requested by the Uniformed Services University Center for Global Health Engagement to support the National Defense Strategy’s mission to increase interoperability with the Republic of Ghana.

While in country for more than a month last year, Fisher led a four-member team creating a NAEMT training site and assisted the 37th Military Hospital, the second largest hospital in Ghana, to establish its own tactical combat casualty care program.

“Without a doubt the best part of my job is teaching others how to save lives,” said Fisher, who graduated summa cum laude from Western Carolina University last year with a bachelor’s degree in emergency and disaster management. “I can save many more lives than I can by myself.”

Although an individual award, Fisher credits the rewarding mission and efforts by the outstanding service members he works with daily and the love and support of his wife, Jillian, for receiving this honor.

“I believe this award shows the people I work with that what we do is important,” he said. “Just as this award validates my efforts, it validates theirs also. Leaders say that service members are ineffective if they don’t have a work/life balance. Well, she is my balance. Her commitment to the Air Force is no less than mine.”

You also may be interested in...

Article Around MHS
Apr 23, 2024

Navy Medicine Tests Expeditionary Medicine System

military personnel on nighttime training patrol

You’re a sailor or Marine protecting conducting distributed maritime operations, and you’re miles from the nearest base or operations hub. Suddenly you find yourself wounded along with several of your fellow service members with the sinking feeling of “now what?” Thankfully, Navy Medicine has been preparing for this situation and is implementing the U ...

Article Around MHS
Apr 9, 2024

Combat Medic Embraces the Cool Part of the Army

U.S. Army Spc. Brianna Braham poses for picture

Even though the day’s exercise focuses on the testing of a new tube-launched, optically tracked, wire-guided missile targeting system, Braham, a combat medic assigned to the 2nd Cavalry Regiment’s Quickstrike Troop, believes that every training exercise is an opportunity for self-improvement.

Article Around MHS
Mar 11, 2024

Expeditionary Medical Facility 150 Alpha Provides Role 3 Medical Capability During 1st Med Bn Marine Corps Combat Readiness Evaluation

Sailors from Expeditionary Medical Facility 150 Alpha receive a simulated patient from 1st Medical Battalion on Feb. 27, 2024, aboard Naval Expeditionary Medical Training Institute, Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton.  (Photo: Petty Officer 2nd Class Stevon Duren )

Sailors from Expeditionary Medical Facility 150 Alpha provided the Role 3 medical capability during the 1st Medical Battalion, 1st Marine Logistics Group, Marine Corps Combat Readiness Evaluation from Feb. 26 through March 1, 2024, aboard Naval Expeditionary Medical Training Institute.

Article Around MHS
Mar 4, 2024

METC Educators and USU CAHS Support Enlisted Service Members

An instructor with the Medical Education and Training Campus addresses service members during a classroom session.

The Medical Education and Training Campus is a branch campus of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences College of Allied Health Sciences. Together they enable Army, Air Force, Navy, and Coast Guard students to earn college credits in specific medical specialty training programs during their military enlistment.

Article Around MHS
Dec 5, 2023

U.S. Army Capt. Veronica Wright: A Leader Working to Improve Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Military Health

Walter Reed National Military Medical Center’s U.S. Army Capt. Veronica Wright is paving a commendable path for her military career. Currently in her fourth year of the Combined Internal Medicine and Psychiatry Residency Program, Wright holds not one, but two key roles. She is both the chief resident of her program and also presides as the chairperson of the Graduate Medical Education Committee's Sub-Committee on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, being recognized for the work she's doing. (Photo by Ricardo Reyes-Guevara/Walter Reed National Military Medical Center)

Diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility are values increasingly recognized as crucial in various sectors, including health care education. For Wright, these values are more than just popular buzzwords—they form the foundation of her work. She champions an inclusive approach in health care education to reduce bias, promote fair treatment, and ...

Article Around MHS
Nov 24, 2023

‘People First, Compassion, Servant Leadership, and Genuine Respect for All’ – Retired Sergeant Major Reflects on Career, Value of Veterans in Continued Service

U.S. Army Pvt. Darryl Warren poses for a photo during  basic training in Fort Knox, Kentucky, in 1987. Today, retired U.S. Army command sergeant major Darryl Warren is an operations program analyst with the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Development Activity at Fort Detrick, Maryland, a job he has held since shortly after retiring from the U.S. Army after a 31-year career. (Courtesy Photo)

The U.S. Army Medical Materiel Development Activity is an integral component of the Department of Defense’s medical readiness enterprise. A key to USAMMDA’s success as the DOD’s premier developer of modernized medical devices, treatments, and equipment is the knowledge and experience brought to the table by its many veterans, who work alongside both ...

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: October 24, 2023
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery