By Army Pfc. Ethan Valetski 5th Mobile Public Affairs
Detachment
JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash., Aug. 30, 2017 — Sixteen of
the Army’s top medics from across the Pacific region gathered at Joint Base
Lewis-McChord, Washington, Aug. 21-25 for Regional Health Command Pacific’s
Best Medic competition.
Soldiers hailing from duty stations in Alaska, Hawaii,
Washington, Korea and Japan competed in the grueling weeklong competition.
“We are testing the competitors on their warrior tasks and
battle drills, as well as their technical proficiency as combat medics,
examining the resiliency of these competitors and seeing how far we can push
them, while looking for who can maintain proficiency under high amounts of
stress,” said Regional Health Command-Pacific Command Sgt. Maj. Rick Watson.
The competition was designed to physically and mentally
challenge each soldier and test their readiness, tactical medical proficiency
and leadership skills, Watson said. Competitors faced a demanding, continuous
and realistic simulated operational environment. Competitors earned points
through successful completion of evaluated events during the testing phases.
“Being in this competition has allowed me to test my skills
and demonstrate competence in a stressful environment,” said Army Sgt. 1st
Class Sheena Blake, a dental technician from the 62nd Medical Brigade. “The
hardest part for me is the unknown. Every day is something different and we
don’t know what’s going to come next.”
Chance to Prove Something
The competition included a physical fitness test, obstacle
course, force on force combat, tailgate medicine test, stress shoot, patient
extraction event, warrior task lane, land navigation and a culminated in a
12-mile road march.
Candidates competed as individuals, with the top two
individuals going on to compete at the U.S. Army Medical Command competition at
Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
“My biggest motivation coming into this competition is
proving myself to my soldiers,” said Army 2nd Lt. Adam Schafer from the 65th
Medical Brigade. Schafer was the winner of the competition.
The competition was planned and executed in conjunction with
I Corps, 7th Infantry Division, 593rd Expeditionary Sustainment Command, 62nd
Medical Brigade and Madigan Army Medical Center.
“I would encourage everyone who can to come out here,” Blake
said. “You don’t have to be a medic to be here, but you have to be a medic at
heart. Having the opportunity to show off the skills we train constantly for
has been a great experience.”
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