[Congressional Record Volume 150, Number 129 (Sunday, October 10, 2004)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E1864-E1865]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO REAR ADMIRAL KATHLEEN MARTIN
______
HON. JOHN P. MURTHA
of pennsylvania
in the house of representatives
Thursday, October 7, 2004
Mr. MURTHA. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to pay tribute to a great
American, patriot, Naval Officer, and fellow Pennsylvanian, Rear
Admiral Kathleen Martin. This spring, Admiral Martin will retire from
the United States Navy after thirty-one years of distinguished
leadership, selfless service, and tireless commitment to our Navy and
nation.
Admiral Martin became the Deputy Surgeon General of the Navy and Vice
Chief, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery on October 3, 2002. A native of
Arnold, Pennsylvania, she is a graduate of Boston University School of
Nursing and received her Master of Science degree in both Nursing
Administration and Family Health Nursing from the University of San
Diego. She is a member of the American College of Healthcare
Executives, the American Society for Public Administration, the
Association of Military Surgeons of the United States and Sigma Theta
Tau.
Admiral Martin was commissioned an Ensign in the Navy Nurse Corps in
May 1973, and was promoted to flag rank while serving as the Medical
Inspector General in 1998. She has held a wide variety of clinical,
staff and leadership positions, including Commanding Officer of Naval
Medical Clinic, Port Hueneme, California; Commanding Officer, Naval
Hospital Charleston, South Carolina; and Commander, National Naval
Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland.
A visionary naval officer and a decisive and inspirational leader
throughout her career, Admiral Martin possesses an infectious
enthusiasm to ensure that world-class health care is delivered
throughout the military health care system. Her oversight of diverse
areas of responsibility affecting the Medical Department and the Navy
has resulted in bold initiatives and innovative programs that will
support our sailors, Marines, and military beneficiaries well into the
twenty-first century. Illustrative of her dynamic and visionary
leadership is ``Family Centered Care.'' Her breakthrough approach,
shifting the fundamental approach of patient care from a traditional
inpatient model based on disease-state and specialty services, to a
patient-centered model that integrates related customer services around
patients has become the standard of care throughout military medicine.
Navy Medicine is applying these Family Centered Care principles to its
unique capability to influence healthy habits and lifestyles during the
building of a Navy family.
Her unquestionable integrity, passionate commitment in service to
others and strong relationship-building skills mark her every
contribution to the Navy and the nation. Admiral Martin leaves a legacy
of distinction and accomplishments in which she should take great pride
and satisfaction. During her tenure as the Deputy Navy Surgeon General,
she has met every challenge posed including those of Operation Enduring
Freedom, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and the Global War on Terror.
Mr. Speaker, I ask to extend best wishes on behalf of the Congress of
the United States for continued happiness and success to Admiral Martin
and her family as they begin the next
[[Page E1865]]
chapter of their lives, with the thanks and gratitude of a grateful
nation for Admiral Martin's loyal and dedicated service.
____________________