ARMY RESERVE MEDICAL COMMAND

Pinellas Park, Florida

Maj. Gen. Troy Kok, commanding general for 99th Regional Support Command, joins the 319th Army Band based out of Fort Totten, New York, and Col. Cindy Saladin, commander for Northeast Medical Area Readiness Support Group to cheer their 1st place position on the east coast.

On June 5, 2017, Hackensack University Medical Center and the U.S. Army Reserve announced the formation of Operation Hackensack S.M.A.R.T. (Strategic Medical Asset Readiness Training), an innovative, first-of-its-kind partnership which focuses on high-quality, individualized specialty medical training for service members to improve their knowledge, skillsets and increase soldier readiness.  Soldiers will partner with their civilian counterparts at Hackensack University Medical Center for 14 days of immersion training utilizing cutting-edge technology, at no additional cost to the government. This innovative relationship will contribute to superior readiness and in-depth training within the medical ranks. It will also provide critical knowledge sharing between military and civilian medical professionals about best practices, techniques and procedures to ensure military service members are trained to use the most current technology in today’s rapidly changing health care landscape.
170605-A-AW713-010.JPG Photo By: Lt. Col. Angela Wallace

Hackensack - Maj. Gen. Troy Kok, commanding general for 99th Regional Support Command, joins the 319th Army Band based out of Fort Totten, New York, and Col. Cindy Saladin, commander for Northeast Medical Area Readiness Support Group to cheer their 1st place position on the east coast. On June 5, 2017, Hackensack University Medical Center and the U.S. Army Reserve announced the formation of Operation Hackensack S.M.A.R.T. (Strategic Medical Asset Readiness Training), an innovative, first-of-its-kind partnership which focuses on high-quality, individualized specialty medical training for service members to improve their knowledge, skillsets and increase soldier readiness. Soldiers will partner with their civilian counterparts at Hackensack University Medical Center for 14 days of immersion training utilizing cutting-edge technology, at no additional cost to the government. This innovative relationship will contribute to superior readiness and in-depth training within the medical ranks. It will also provide critical knowledge sharing between military and civilian medical professionals about best practices, techniques and procedures to ensure military service members are trained to use the most current technology in today’s rapidly changing health care landscape.


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