Passion For Healing Forges Leaders Of Military Medicine
by Marcy Sanchez, U.S. Army Landstuhl Regional Medical Center
February 21, 2021
As a college student, Lee Phillips didn’t know what life had in
store for him. In his words, he was “kind of going through college
and working a little bit, trying to pay my way through and didn't
really know what I wanted to do.”
After witnessing his father
walk again following a traumatic injury, Phillips was led toward a
career in medicine as a physical therapist to help others like
physical therapists helped his father.
“When I saw (my
father’s healing) I told myself ‘this is something that I'm really
interested in. I think I would like to help people like, that
therapist helped my father,’ and it’s something I've been doing ever
since,” said Phillips, now a physical therapist at Landstuhl
Regional Medical Center in Landstuhl, Germany.
Lee Phillips, a physical therapist at
U.S. Army Landstuhl Regional Medical Center’s Physical Therapy Clinic, assesses a patient during an initial session at LRMC
on January 25, 2021. Phillips was recently selected to the Joint Medical Executive Skills Institute Intermediate Executive Skills Course (JMESI-IES). The course provides education and training on leadership and management skills necessary to successfully serve in an intermediate-level leadership position within a DHA Medical Treatment Facility. (U.S. Army photo by Marcy
Sanchez, Landstuhl Regional Medical Center)
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Phillips passion for healing drove him toward work with the
Department of Defense, first as a contracted physical therapist at
Fort Leonard Wood’s General Leonard Wood Army Community Hospital,
and later as a Defense Health Agency civilian employee in Germany.
After 20 years working in physical therapy, Phillips is
equipped for increased responsibility and was recently selected for
the Joint Medical Executive Skills Institute Intermediate Executive
Skills Course (JMESI-IES). The course provides education and
training on leadership and management skills necessary to
successfully serve in an intermediate-level leadership position
within a DHA Medical Treatment Facility (MTF).
“(Phillips)
has great initiative,” said Maj. Candi Roberts, chief of LRMC’s
Physical Therapy Clinic. “He has a strong drive to make sure to
always do the right thing all the time for his patients and for the
team that he works for.”
For Phillips, a native of
Greenbrier, Arkansas, the course would open opportunities for
advancement and provide an in depth understanding of the DHA
mission, strategic plan and help develop skills required to serve in
an intermediate-level leadership position.
“When he expressed
interest in the course, I was really enthusiastic to see him trying
to progress himself so that one day he will take over as a chief or
an assistant chief at an MTF,” said Roberts. “I know he's going to
do great things in the future.”
With only two years at LRMC,
Phillips has already taken on increased roles, heading multiple
efforts to standardize policies within his department, a position
especially important during a recent on-site survey aimed to assess
standards compliance.
“With (Phillips) leading the team and
making sure we have everything in place, I know that we're in good
hands,” said Roberts.
While the new skills may advance
Phillips’ career, he hopes to continue treating Service Members in
helping them heal for years to come.
“It's awesome to be able
to treat our service members,” explains Phillips. “What (we) do
here, when a Soldier who is less than 100 percent comes in, and we
try to get him back to 100 percent, we are helping the military with
their readiness. I may not be able to go out and help someone on the
front lines but I may be able to help someone stay in the fight or
get back into it.”
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