Here’s a few shots from around Navy Medicine for your viewing pleasure:

orders to Naval Hospital, Twenty-Nine Palms; Lt. Casey E. McCann, MC, to his next duty station at Naval Hospital, Pensacola;
Lt. John S. Roberts, MC, assigned to Naval Hospital, Okinawa, Japan; Lt. Gordon P. Salgado, MC, with upcoming orders to US Naval
Hospital, Agana, Guam; Lt. Adam D. Voelckers, MC, with upcoming orders to U.S. Naval Hospital, Agana, Guam; and Lt. Amelia L.
Wright, MC, assigned orders to Federal Health Care Center, Great Lakes.
(Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class James Coyle, NHB Public Affairs)

use for the day at Kahuku Training Area on Oahu, Hawaii, July 11, 2014, during the Rim of the Pacific 2014 exercise. The Tactical
Tele-Medicine is a ruggedized man-portable patient monitor that provieds vital signs, video and audio over tactical networks to doctors
in other areas of the battlefield. The device is being field tested by the Marine Corps Warfighting Lab during the Advanced Warfighting
Experiment. (Photo by Sgt. Sarah Dietz)

a casualty drill as part of a Humanitarian Assistance/Disaster Relief (HA/DR) response during the Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) Exercise
2014. Twenty-two nations, more than 40 ships and submarines, about 200 aircraft and 25,000 personnel are participating in RIMPAC
from June 26 to Aug. 1, in and around the Hawaiian Islands and Southern California. The world’s largest international maritime exercise,
RIMPAC provides a unique training opportunity that helps participants foster and sustain the cooperative relationships that are critical
to ensuring the safety of sea lanes and security on the world’s oceans. RIMPAC 2014 is the 24th exercise in the series that began
in 1971. (Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Johans Chavarro)

is in its ninth iteration and is the largest annual multilateral humanitarian assistance and disaster relief preparedness mission conducted in
the Asia-Pacific region. (Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Karolina A. Oseguera)