Posted on May 14, 2016
Jan Scruggs: Remembering Jesus De Leon: gentle soul, draftee, Vietnam vet
1.79K
25
7
9
9
0
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 2
Suspended Profile
SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL - May God bless you and all who served with you. I am so sorry we could not save all those who passed through our hospital doors . . . but we really tried. I was just at the memorial last weekend . . . and amazed by how many individual troops and families were visiting. Far too many we could not save . . . lost but most certainly not forgotten. Deepest Regrets, Sandy
SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
1LT Sandy Annala well said and thank you for your service as well. A PICTURE IS WORTH A 1,000 WORDS. Well depicted! Amen!
(1)
(0)
SGT Philip Roncari
1LT Sandy Annala-Words cannot express thank you!
(0)
(0)
CMDCM Gene Treants
1LT Sandy Annala Regrets are really for only not doing your best and I do not you or the people you worked with ever gave less then 100%. Thanks for all you did and do.
(0)
(0)
Thanks for mentioning and honoring the memory and service of E-4 Jesus De Leon a draftee from Texas who served and died with the 199th Infantry Brigade in Vietnam SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL. In the history of warfare there have most likely been well over 1 billion soldiers like Jesus De Leon who were drafted or pressed into military service and mortally wounded or killed for the cause they were fighting for.
Thankfully since Florence Nightingale successfully integrated combat nursing into the Crimean war in the 1850s millions of wounded and sick soldiers and other service members have been nursed back to health. My paternal grandfather was wounded as a British Lance Corporal in the Trench warfare of WWI. I expect that most of us have known service members who have been saved by the grace of God through combat or other trauma medical capabilities while most of us have known service members killed in action or who died as a result of it.
Thanks to all who served or serve in military medicine. You have impacted many more than you could possibly know.
1LT Sandy Annala MAJ (Join to see) CPT (Join to see) LTC Paul Labrador CPT Barbara Smith BG (Join to see)
Thankfully since Florence Nightingale successfully integrated combat nursing into the Crimean war in the 1850s millions of wounded and sick soldiers and other service members have been nursed back to health. My paternal grandfather was wounded as a British Lance Corporal in the Trench warfare of WWI. I expect that most of us have known service members who have been saved by the grace of God through combat or other trauma medical capabilities while most of us have known service members killed in action or who died as a result of it.
Thanks to all who served or serve in military medicine. You have impacted many more than you could possibly know.
1LT Sandy Annala MAJ (Join to see) CPT (Join to see) LTC Paul Labrador CPT Barbara Smith BG (Join to see)
(2)
(0)
SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
LTC Stephen F. thank you for your STELLAR response! Great historical narrative and personal medical experience through generations makes the point in case. Well said and articulately conveyed response that is very sentimental too me. I have been to combat 6 times and blown up twice (IED) medicine made an impact also to nurse me back but, I thank God each and every day for his grace and mercy ultimately. Too God be the Glory!
(1)
(0)
CPT (Join to see)
Thank you Sir. Probably the greatest feeling in the world is being able to care for my Soldiers. Everyone who walked into my office walked out as a part of my Family. Although it took some time to accept the lack of combat, I am still so grateful that I had the ability to impact Soldiers around me and save them from making horrid decisions without complete information.
I have been putting together a talk on the evolution of combat medicine, and the changes are amazing!! To think that 100 years ago, you had less than a 10% chance of surviving from point of injury, and now if you survive the first hour then you have approximately a 93% chance!!! Thanks to those on the battlefields that are pushing the envelope, and all that are making sure my Docs (and nurses/physicians/etc) are safe as well. Bring them all home safe if at all possible.
v/r,
CPT Butler
I have been putting together a talk on the evolution of combat medicine, and the changes are amazing!! To think that 100 years ago, you had less than a 10% chance of surviving from point of injury, and now if you survive the first hour then you have approximately a 93% chance!!! Thanks to those on the battlefields that are pushing the envelope, and all that are making sure my Docs (and nurses/physicians/etc) are safe as well. Bring them all home safe if at all possible.
v/r,
CPT Butler
(1)
(0)
Read This Next