06 May 2012

Braceland Recap 2012


The day started off with a research presentation by LCDR Jeff Millegan on the special stress military children undergo as a result of geographic moves. Did you know that a child of a military parent moves 2.5 times more often than the general population? LCDR Patcho Santiago followed with his research on Army Master Resilience Training (MRT) in a population of Navy personnel. After MRT Navy subjects reported less resilience and lower morale, and the more MRT they got, the worse they did.

CAPT Robert Alonso got up after the morning break and gave a dense presentation on coming changes in Marine Corps forces and their impact on mental health requirements. The bottom line was that as dedicated Marine Corps medical billets are reduced, more TAD personnel requests from the Marine Corps to BUMED can be expected. LCDR Paul Sargent, along with LCDR Ken Richter, gave a compelling overview of San Diego's residential treatment program for PTSD. The program is quite impressive in its design and depth. It could become a model program depending on longitudinal outcomes, which we may hear about next year at the Braceland Seminar in San Francisco. The morning ended with CDR Curt West's description and reflections on the integration of the Army and Navy mental health departments at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. VADM Mateczun concluded with a macro perspective on the massive undertaking to merge the two hospitals, and he reminded us that the new medical center (which is truly huge), is the only military medical center mandated by law to be "world class."

The Sears Award went to CAPT Bill Hocter as its 23d recipient. In what one might call an "Oprah moment," just as Bill came to the front to receive the award, the door opened and Bill's wife, Annie, surprised him and came to stand by his side. Annie had flown to Philadelphia about an hour before just to be with him. Bill was nearly overwhelmed. Annie and Bill have nine children, and one attendee remarked that the Sears Award recognized Annie as much as Bill. A sentiment with which I am sure Bill would agree. Of the nominees this year Bill was the only one who spent his entire career in the trenches and never sought an executive position.

After a sumptuous buffet lunch we resumed with CAPT Gail Manos' annual state of the specialty talk. The good news was that deployments are trending down and training billets are increasing. Then we launched into nine short presentations by residents. All the presentations were polished and engaging, and reflected the high quality of our training programs.

I won't recap each resident presentation, but I will provide a vignette. In order to reduce resident anxiety, I always put the residents at the end when the milieu is less formal, and they have had all day to see how things go and get acquainted with the speaking environment. LT Chai Wu from San Diego told me ahead of time that she had extra speaking anxiety, so I put her alphabetically last on the schedule. When she rose to speak, she brought with her three packages of chocolate cupcake Tastykakes, original Philadelphia products that the hotel served as afternoon snacks. As she spoke, she quizzed the audience. When the first correct answer was shouted out, she lobbed a Tastykake across the room as a prize! I interrupted her from the back of the room, "I thought you said you were shy!?" One of her residency mates answered, "No, you misunderstood her, she said she was Chai." I think we all found out that she is Chai, and she is, in fact, not shy. It was a great way to end another successful Braceland Seminar.

The photo above of the Sears Award crystal trophy is courtesy of LT Chai Wu, who is the first to successfully photograph the crystal in sharp focus with a digital camera. Click to enlarge.

05 May 2012

Philadelphia

Look for a recap of the 2012 Braceland Seminar tomorrow. Above, the Hard Rock Cafe next to the Marriott Hotel in Philadelphia center city.
A block away from the Hard Rock, and also across from the Marriott Hotel is the Reading Terminal Market, a must-see in downtown Philly. I had breakfast at the Down Home Diner, the other neon sign in the photo above.

02 May 2012

Out of Office AutoReply

Dennis White is just killing me.

The last time I posted one of his Out of Office AutoReplies, he was spending a week at the rifle range. Now he's doing an MRX in friggin' Indiana. He gets all the fun. Here's his latest AutoReply:

The OSCAR Team will be at an MRX in Atterbury IN from 30Apr-14May. During this time, there will be no clinical capabilities. HN Nguyen will be manning the phones at 830-5845 and can provide referral and scheduling assistance. For patient care issues, the RAS (CDR Pray, 830-5830) is available to provide medication refills for established patients. New patients are referred to the Mental Health Clinic at 830-2724.

01 May 2012

2012 Braceland Seminar Program

Click to enlarge, it gets big enough to read or print.

26 April 2012

Addiction


25 April 2012

Map

Click to enlarge and print.

20 April 2012

Admiral Sears and the Sears Award

RADM James T. Sears, MC, USN (Retired) congratulates CAPT Robert Alonso, MC, USN as the current and 22d recipient of Navy Psychiatry's distinguished psychiatrist Sears Award at Headquarters, Marine Corps. CAPT Alonso holds the crystal trophy bearing the name of Admiral Sears.

19 April 2012

How The Sears Vote Worked

Click to enlarge the graphic above. The vote numbers are true, but the order of the nominees does not correspond to the order of their biographies below.

Sears Award Vote Results

After two days of voting there were 48 votes. This about 20 votes shy of total votes in past years. It represents a participation rate of about 40 percent.


The number of votes separating the four nominees was not wide. However, when votes from the two lower polling nominees were redistributed, there was a clear majority preference.

The recipient of the 2021 Sears Award will be announced at the Braceland Seminar on 4 May 2012.

I thank all those who voted for their participation.

18 April 2012