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Army Medical IT Program Changes Leadership
April 18, 2012 by MC4 Public Affairs
Program Executive Officer Enterprise Information Systems
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Program Executive Officer Enterprise Information Systems (PEO EIS) Douglas Wiltsie officiated the MC4 Change of Charter ceremony at Fort Detrick, Md. on April 17, 2012. Lt. Col. Danny J. Morton accepts the Charter from Wiltsie, assuming the duties and responsibilities associated with managing the MC4 program as the product manager. View on Flickr

Program Executive Officer Enterprise Information Systems (PEO EIS) Douglas Wiltsie officiated the MC4 Change of Charter ceremony at Fort Detrick, Md. on April 17, 2012. Lt. Col. Danny J. Morton accepts the Charter from Wiltsie, assuming the duties and responsibilities associated with managing the MC4 program as the product manager. View on Flickr

Lt. Col. Danny Morton accepts the flag from Program Executive Officer Enterprise Information Systems (PEO EIS) Douglas Wiltsie during the Change of Charter ceremony. Lt. Col. William E. Geesey relinquished his responsibility as the MC4 product manager and Morton assumed the responsibilities and authority associated with this role. View on Flickr

Lt. Col. William E. Geesey steps down as the MC4 product manager during a Change of Charter Ceremony on April 17, 2012 at Fort Detrick, Md. Geesey is the longest serving PM to date, having served in this role for 44 months. View on Flickr

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  • Lt. Col. William Geesey is the longest tenured MC4 product manager to date
  • Lt. Col. Danny Morton assumes the role of MC4 product manager on April 17, 2012
  • Morton intends to expand use, improve user training and focus on quality and capabilities

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FORT DETRICK, Md. – The Army’s deployable electronic medical record and medical logistics system will be managed by a new commander, Lt. Col. Danny J. Morton. On April 17, Lt. Col. William E. Geesey relinquished his role as product manager for the Army’s Medical Communications for Combat Casualty Care (MC4) Product Management Office to Morton during a change of charter ceremony at Fort Detrick, Md. Program Executive Officer Enterprise Information Systems (PEO EIS) Douglas Wiltsie, officiated the ceremony.

Geesey leaves MC4 as the longest tenured product manager for MC4 since the program began in 1999. During his four years of service, MC4 launched a “train as you fight” initiative to replace paper-based medical documentation in battalion aid stations in garrison and improved unit readiness by injecting the systems into military training exercises worldwide. He also led efforts to field innovative technology solutions, improving medical logistics and traumatic brain injury reporting on the battlefield, as well as introducing telehealth capabilities that connect remote Soldiers with mental health specialists.

“MC4 has made great strides in improving the health care of deployed Soldiers through the use of medical information technology,” Geesey said. “I’m proud to have contributed toward this critical initiative.”

Morton, former chief of staff at the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency, intends to expand use and engagement with MC4 systems, improve user training and readiness, and continue to focus on system quality and capabilities to benefit deployed Soldiers worldwide.

“This is an opportunity to impact the lives of many through efficiencies in new technologies,” Morton said. “Aligning ourselves with the Army strategy, collaborating with strategic partners and focusing on outcomes versus outputs is just a start. I’m ready for the challenge and believe in what we’re doing here.”

Since 2003, MC4 has enabled the capture of more than 17 million electronic patient encounters in the combat zone. MC4 has also trained 63,000 medical staff and commanders, and fielded 50,000 systems to 2,400 units with medical personnel, to include Army National Guard and Reserve units, and active component divisional units throughout 22 countries.

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CPL James R. Bingham III

As a 68W10 deployed to OEF 2012, my first exposure to MC4 was in March of this year. I feel the system still has a bit to go towards making the GUI more user friendly. I learn something new every day just with trial and error. My frustration lies with the disconnect between the S6 that has little if any knowledge of the MC4 system and its requirements and the DOD Civilian MC4 Techs. There is also a general lack of DOD Civilian coverage for help desk issues. Our S6 recently switched the network over to a static IP with addressing the specific needs of the MC4 system - in fact they were not aware of the system and the fact that it uploads to a separate server and uses a dynamic IP configuration. My thought is that most S6 shops are not aware or trained on integrating MC4. We are still recovering and the system is still not at 100 % operability. I am also interested in taking my knowledge as a 68W10 and my background in IT, and using it in either a DOD civilian capacity or Independent Contractor.

May 11, 2012

PM MC4

MC4 does not write software code for the system and its application. Our role is to test and integrate the software provided and released by Defense Health Information Management System (DHIMS) office, which is under Tricare Management Agency (TMA). DHIMS develops software for all services under the Theater Medical Information Program - Joint (TMIP-J). The integrated Electronic Health Record (iEHR) is in the planning stage and will provide the exchange data between DoD and VA systems. Those are policy decisions made at the Health Affairs level of OSD and outside of the MC4 purview.

April 30, 2012

So is DOD still using a proprietary EMR package that doesn't talk to the VA so there is seamless continuity of care or for that matter the DOD packages (i.e., pharmacy, Lab and Xray) weren't integrated. Was a "clunky" GUI! I suppose billions more have been paid to a contractor rather than adopting the "free" VA software rather than making sure the contractor continues to "own" the code. Ah yes - progress.

April 24, 2012

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