World Class Medical Facility Breaks Ground for Military Personnel to Combat Traumatic Brain Injury at National Naval Medical Center
Release date: 12/7/2008
Bethesda, MD – The Honorable Robert Gates, Secretary, Department of Defense, the
Honorable Dr. Donald C. Winter, Secretary of the Navy, the Honorable James Peake,
Secretary, Department of Veterans Affairs, Rear Admiral Richard R. Jeffries, Commander,
National Naval Medical Center, Arnold Fisher, the Honorary Chairman of the Intrepid
Fallen Heroes Fund, and wounded and recovering military service men and women and their
families took part in the ground breaking ceremony for the National Intrepid Center of
Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury (NICoE) – a $70 million,
75,000 sq. ft., state-of-the-art treatment and rehabilitation center.
This facility will provide leading edge services support for soldiers with post traumatic stress
disorder, complex psychological health issues, and/or traumatic brain injury (TBI). Further, the
center will conduct research, test new protocols and provide comprehensive training and
education to patients, providers and families while maintaining ongoing telehealth follow-up
care.
The project is being funded by the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund (IFHF), which provides
assistance to our nation’s military heroes who have been critically injured in the performance of
duty and their families. The IFHF previously raised more than $60 Million to support families of
military personnel lost in Operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and to construct the Center for the
Intrepid, an advanced physical rehabilitation facility at Brooke Army Medical Center in San
Antonio, Texas, which opened in 2007. Actual construction for the NICoE is scheduled to begin
this summer and with its opening in late 2009.
“The National Intrepid Center of Excellence should send a message to military personnel
overseas fighting for the freedom of others. We will always remember the sacrifices made by our
brave, young heroes and their families, and we will continue to support our soldiers by providing
them with world-class support when they return,” Mr. Fisher said.
NICoE will be the premiere center among a series of five new facilities dedicated to
psychological health and research, diagnosis and treatment of TBI. NICoE will serve the most
severe TBI cases and will feature the most advanced equipment and facilities for treatment of
TBI. This series of facilities will be added into a new and advanced system for diagnosing nonpenetrating
TBI and psychological health issues, and getting proper treatment to patients.
The centers will not only provide treatment but will also be research facilities. Improvements in
screening, diagnosis, and treatment will be fed back out to the military and VA hospitals and the
medical facilities in the field. Long-term follow-up care will also be incorporated into the
system plan to ensure that, once soldiers separate from the military, they do not separate from
whatever continued treatment they need.
“I am honored to be a part of this groundbreaking today, said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Dr.
James Peake. “This center will have such great impact on the lives of our service members who
have given so much for our country. Meeting the challenges of TBI and other injuries in this
newest generation of veterans is a critical success factor. This new center in addition to the three
new Fisher houses will provide these great men and women with the care and rehabilitation they
need and deserve.”
To augment the center, Ken Fisher, Chairman of the Fisher House Foundation, announced the
Fisher House Foundation will build three Fisher Houses so that the families of military personnel
can be close to their loved ones during this stressful time. The Fisher House program provides
"comfort homes," built on the grounds of major military and VA medical centers, that enable
family members to be close to a loved one at the most stressful times - during the hospitalization
for an unexpected illness, disease, or injury.
Also at the dedication ceremony were: GEN James E. Cartwright, USMC, Vice Chairman, Joint
Chiefs of Staff, GEN Richard A. Cody, USA, Vice Chief of Staff, United States Army, LG
James F. Amos, USMC, Commanding General, Marine Corps Combat Development Command,
VADM Adam M. Robinson Jr., Surgeon General of the Navy, LG James G. Roudebush, USAF,
Surgeon General, United States Air Force, LG Eric Schoomaker, USA, Surgeon General of the
Army, MG Ken Farmer (Ret.), Executive Vice President and COO, TriWest Healthcare Alliance,
MG Carla Hawley-Bowland, USA, Commanding General, NARMC,WRAMC, RADM Richard
R. Jeffries, USN, Commander, National Naval Medical Center, RADM John M. Mateczun,
USN, Commander, Joint Task Force National Capital Region Medical, RADM Michael H.
Mittelman, USN, Director, Medical Resources Plans and Policy Division N931, BG Dave Papak,
USMC, Director, Joint Capabilities Assessment and Integration Directorate, RADM William
Roberts, USN, Medical Officer to the Marine Corps, RADM David J. Smith, USN, Joint Staff
Surgeon J4 Joint Staff, BG Loree Sutton, M.D., USA, Director, Defense Center of Excellence
(DCoE), Mr. Bill White, President, Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund, Mr. David A. Winters, Intrepid
Fallen Heroes Fund Trustee, Mr. Kenneth Fisher, Chairman of the Fisher House Foundation, Mr.
David Coker, President, Fisher House Foundation.