May
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9 Military Hospitals Receive Highest Leapfrog Grade for Safe, High-Quality Care
Defense Health Agency is the first federal health system to participate in the Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade program—receiving an “A” Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade for nine military hospitals and clinics.
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Air Force Senior Airman Erick Requadt climbs a dirt incline during the 2019 Moody Mud Run in Ray City, Ga. For service members to meet and excel in their performance, it’s important for them to pay attention to all eight life domains, including physical fitness. (Photo by Air Force Airman 1st Class Eugene Oliver.)
Army Sgt. Maureen Kang, a licensed practical nurse with Weed Army Community Hospital’s Medical Surgical Ward, triages a simulated casualty during the team competition portion of the hospital’s skills fair January 21 at the Mary E. Walker Center at Fort Irwin, Calif. (Photo by Kimberly Hackbarth, Weed Army Community Hospital Public Affairs.)
Hospital staff continued to take COVID-19 precautions during the event to ensure a safe learning environment.
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Total Force Fitness encourages Service Members to look beyond traditional fitness approaches to boost their performance.
Members of the Air Force Cycling Team ride near Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota in 2017. There are six Minot Air Force Base Airmen on the Air Force Cycling Team, which has more than 150 cyclists Air Force-wide. (Photo by Air Force Airman 1st Class Jonathan McElderry.)
The Religious Support Team from the U.S. Army Reserve’s 785th Medical Detachment – Combat Operational Stress Control Unit, comprised of Army Capt. Ian Olson, left, chaplain, and Army Sgt. Steven Burns, religious affairs specialist, provide spiritual and personal support to the service members deployed as part of the Urban Augmentation Medical Task Force in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, Jan. 13, 2021. (Photo by Zachary Mott, 88th Readiness Division.)
Air Force Senior Airman Kasey Ginn, medical technician, administers the COVID-19 vaccine to Army Capt. Christine Kasprisin, physical therapist, at Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, Jan. 26, 2021. The San Antonio Military Health System is starting the next phase of the Department of Defense’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout -- expanding the scope of who is eligible to get vaccinated against the virus. (Photo by Jason Edwards.)
Military chaplains and religious affairs specialist deploy to support our military medical providers responding working on the frontlines in response to the COVID-19 pandemic
Social fitness, one of the total Force Fitness framework’s eight domains, is an important element to holistic health.
Vaccinations for eligible 1b military personnel will be coordinated by their military units.
Navy Lt. (Rabbi) Emily Rosenzweig (left), deputy chaplain for Destroyer Squadron 9, begins a Rosh Hashanah service aboard the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz in the Strait of Hormuz, Sept. 18. (Photo by Navy Seaman Dalton Reidhead.)
Navy Senior Chief Petty Officer Luis Reyes (right) from Ft. Sam Houston in San Antonio, mentors Navy Hospital Corpsman First Class Jon Alexander, who is stationed at the Navy Medicine Training Support Command there. Reyes is the senior chief instructor of the Hospital Corpsmen Program and trains young officers for the most part. He relies on four pillars of mentoring: family, finances, fitness, and faith. (Photo Courtesy of Navy Senior Chief Petty Officer Luis J. Reyes.)
A Navy senior chief petty officer shares his secrets to being a successful mentor.
Navy Capt. Raymond Houk, Chaplain for Navy Medicine, says spiritual fitness and support is integral to the mission
Army Staff Sgt. Jimmy Covas, who competed for TEAM SOCOM, hugs his wife Rebekah after shooting his way to a gold medal in the air pistol finals during the 2018 Department of Defense Warrior Games at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs Colorado. The Warrior Games is an annual event, established in 2010, to introduce wounded, ill and injured service members to adaptive sports to enhance their recovery and rehabilitation. (Photo by Roger Wollenberg.)
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