Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Cache

Health.mil has undergone a recent update. For the best user experience we recommend clearing your browser cache.

Defense Health Agency Launches New Digital Health Care Tools at Five Military Hospitals

Image of infographic. The Defense Health Agency is launching a new care model at five venture sites enabled by a suite of new digital tools called My Military Health, announced DHA Director U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Telita Crosland at the 2024 annual meeting of the Society of Federal Health Professionals. My Military Health aims to offer care that is individualized, accessible, and efficient. (Graphic by: My Military Health project team)

The Defense Health Agency has launched a suite of new digital health care tools at five military hospitals.

Called “My Military Health,” the tools will offer care that is individualized, accessible, and convenient. My Military Health will be accessible 24/7 by computer and mobile devices, will allow patients to schedule appointments, engage with automated clinical support for medical conditions, and use self-help wellness programs.

DHA Director U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Telita Crosland announced the strategic effort at last month’s 2024 annual meeting of AMSUS, The Society of Federal Health Professionals.

“This helps us move beyond traditional models of care that rely primarily on in-person visits,” Crosland said. “The tools will include cutting-edge technologies that strengthen our digital platform and provide a comprehensive blend of self-guided care, real-time and flexible virtual care, and upgraded direct patient care–a model of care that fundamentally changes the experience for patients.”

The five hospitals, referred to as venture sites, are:

Crosland noted that the initial innovations will be targeted to primary care and behavioral health services. “We’re focused on testing new approaches at these sites and not just the technology,” Crosland said. "We will start with the patient first. We've got to make health care better and easier to access for our patients. Full stop.”

“Last year, I outlined a vision where patients can better manage their own care and not face a dozen obstacles to get care when they need it,” said Crosland. “On the provider side, a vision of the future is one where physicians, nurses, and medics are liberated by technology rather than burdened by it. A future where the burden of monitoring and entering data for providers and patients is offloaded on devices, and services are connected.”

“We need to have less friction and allow patients to get in the door—and the door does not need to be a physical one. We need an incentive system that makes it easy for medical staff to accommodate patients,” she said. “We need partnerships with industry to adapt to the most current technology and who will help us with our inclination to think virtual first.”

“This is just the beginning,” said Crosland. “We are building something new. We're not going to be perfect, but we're going to get better. And then we're going to keep getting better.”

You also may be interested in...

Article
Sep 18, 2024

New Intrepid Spirit Center for Fort Bliss, last to be built for NICoE

From left to right, Dr. Nicholas Asobo with William Beaumont Army Medical Center Traumatic Brain Injury Department, Lt. Col. Shannon Ford, Mr. Jason Rainey, Mr. David Winters, Col. Lee Freeman, commander of WBAMC, SSGT Spencer Milo, Dr. Sean Sebesta, director of TBI Department, WBAMC, Mr. Christopher Scott, patient advocate, WBAMC, and Ms. Lisa Yaconiello partake in the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the newly opened Intrepid Spirit Center at Fort Bliss, on September 18, 2024 on the campus of WBAMC hospital. (Photo by Staff Sgt. Lauren Feick)

On September 18, 2024, a ribbon-cutting ceremony was held at William Beaumont Army Medical Center to celebrate the opening of the newly constructed Intrepid Spirit Center. The ceremony was celebrated with commemorative speeches and guided tours of the new building. The Ft. Bliss Intrepid Spirit Center is the last one to be built for the Defense ...

Article
Sep 11, 2024

Medic-X Training

A member from the 302nd Airlift Wing signals to Airmen on the flightline at Peterson Space Force Base, Colorado, Sept. 4, 2024.

Members from the 21st Medical Group and the 21st Security Forces Squadron recently partnered with the 302nd Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron to conduct Medic-X training, where they practiced patient on-loading and off-loading from aircraft.

Article
Aug 28, 2024

Their Goal is To Help my Goal Become a Reality Says U.S. Army Sgt. Russel Mendenhall

Sgt Russel Mendenhall and Recovery Care Coordinator Kenneth Tate pose for picture

While deployed in Africa, U.S. Army Sgt. Russel Mendenhall hit his head in a Humvee. A few days later, he had a brain bleed and a seizure. He was diagnosed with Todd Paralysis. The condition, named after the Irish physiologist and physician Robert Bentley Todd in 1849, is the exhaustion of the primary motor cortex after a seizure, which can limit an ...

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: April 18, 2025
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery