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.

Program Manager Continues Serving Military Members, Families, After Almost 40 Years

Image of Program Manager Continues Serving Military Members, Families, After Almost 40 Years. Retired U.S. Navy Corpsman continues to serve military members and their families across the Military Health System as a program manager for Surgical Services Clinical Community, Surgical Clinical Management. (U.S. Army photo by Robbie Hammer, Defense Health Agency)

For almost four decades, Dave Salazar has served military service members, their families, and the nation. His story of service began in 1983 as a young U.S. Navy Corpsman. In 2024, he is the program manager for Surgical Services Clinical Community, Surgical Clinical Management Team at DHA.

Salazar is one of many in his family who have taken the oath of service and put on the uniform. Eight of his family members have served their country, in the U.S. Navy or the U.S. Army. His father, Frank Salazar, enlisted in the U.S. Army. His brother and sister followed in his footsteps. Of his mother, Maria’s five brothers, three served in the U.S. Navy and another in the U.S. Army.

His only child, Chase, was the last of the Salazar family who wore a service uniform. He left the U.S. Navy in 2015 after serving as a submariner on the USS Michigan and USS Pennsylvania.

Salazar said that he has enjoyed supporting all the military services throughout the years and providing gains for our patients, clinicians, and support staff.

“My passion for medicine and the military, both have a common goal of providing service to beneficiaries and the country,” said Salazar who came to DHA in 2019 as the program manager for the Surgical Services Clinical Community, Surgical Clinical Management Team. “This is what keeps me coming back every day.” He was also the acting chief for the Surgical Clinical Management Team until July 2023.

Salazar works with clinical support, specialty care, clinical quality management, health care operations, medical logistics, publications, clinical communities, and clinical management teams across the Military Health System by writing and reviewing administrative instructions, or policies, on clinical actions within surgical environments to include primary operating rooms, sterile processing, surgical clinics, patient safety, and infection control.

“The Navy provided me so much when I was active duty serving stateside, overseas, and when deployed,” said the El Paso, Texas, native. “My training, skills, and experience grew every year at every location—I truly believe I could never have obtained in the civilian sector.”

During Operation Desert Storm, he treated wounded and injured sailors and Marines while deployed in the Mediterranean Sea on the hospital ship, USNS Mercy in 1991. Two years later, he was in a very different climate supporting Operation Deep Freeze in Antarctica for a six-month deployment.

Salazar’s last active duty assignment was at the Naval School of Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland, at the National Naval Medical Center, now Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, as a surgical instructor.

After his retirement in 1999, he went home to El Paso, Texas, and worked at a civilian hospital as the coordinator of sterile processing. In 2000, Salazar passed the National Board Exam for Certified Surgical First Assistants earning a state license to practice. For the next three years, he was a freelance surgical first assistant before joining a private neurosurgery practice.

For Salazar, it was time to come back to federal service, an environment he was familiar with and giving him the opportunity to take care of service members, retirees, and their families. He joined the medical team at William Beaumont Army Medical Center at Fort Bliss in El Paso, in the Biological Research Service specializing in surgery.

Before joining the Defense Health Agency in 2019, Salazar continued to serve the Fort Bliss community in a variety of positions with growing scope and responsibility before joining the U.S. Army Medical Command in the program analysis and evaluation department within the program and budget division.

Salazar understands the value of continuing his professional growth through training and education opportunities available at DHA and enjoys sharing newly gained knowledge with his teammates.

“Educating new staff members to the surgical program management team, explaining the nuances of the mission, and ensuring they understand what goes into working a functional and efficient program are part of my responsibilities,” he said. “I want them to get excited about what we do here at DHA and how the surgical program impacts the DHA mission, and more importantly, improves the quality of care provided by medical teams to our patients.”

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: March 06, 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