Theodore's World: Dr. Danny Jazarevic Statement About Obama's Canceled Visit

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August 01, 2008

Dr. Danny Jazarevic Statement About Obama's Canceled Visit



The McCain campaign issued the following Statement On Barack Obama's Canceled Troop Visits

The McCain campaign issued the following statement today:


Today, Dr. Danny Jazarevic, who served as the Chief of Trauma, Critical Care and Vascular Surgery at Landstuhl, issued the following statement on Barack Obama's canceled visit to Ramstein and Landstuhl:

"Last week, Senator Obama skipped a visit with wounded U.S. troops at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany because the Pentagon would not allow campaign staff or media to accompany him into the hospital. I served as director of trauma surgery at that hospital for nearly four years and saw the effect that a visit from a celebrity like Senator Obama could have on morale. During that time, I do not recall a single member of Congress canceling a visit with the troops despite being just a few hours away, but Senator Obama seems to have been more concerned with how the visit would affect him than how it would affect the soldiers recovering from wounds received in the service of their country."



Decorated Army colonel, vascular surgeon

Dr. Danny Jazarevic wears many hats (and coats), including that of a surgeon, an Army colonel, husband/father, musician, karate enthusiast and history buff.
Dr. Danny Jazarevic served as the Chief of Trauma, Critical Care and Vascular Surgery at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center. In 1984, Dr. Jazarevic joined the United States Army and later the Florida National Guard. He has since served in Honduras, Africa, Saudi Arabia, Bosnia, and Iraq. From December 2002 through January 2006, Dr. Jazarevic was assigned to the U.S. Army Hospital in Landstuhl, Germany, where he served as Chief of Trauma, Critical Care and Vascular Surgery. During this period, he deployed to Iraq numerous times, including with the 101st Airborne Division Forward Surgical Team and as Director of Operations for the 44th U.S. Army Medical Command. He is currently the Chief Trauma Surgeon at a civilian medical center in Florida, and also serves as a full Colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve. Dr. Jazarevic has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal.


And this from The Mountaineer

Imagine attending a dinner with six fascinating people.

The first to arrive is a U.S. Army colonel in charge of all the clinical operations in Iraq, including dealing with all wounded American soldiers.

Next to arrive is the son of a diplomat who speaks seven languages proficiently.

Third to arrive is a brilliant vascular surgeon with an active career in critical care at five county hospitals Palm Beach, Fla.

Next to join the group is a man who defected to Austria from Croatia in 1982 and was shot in the leg while crossing the border.

The fifth man to be seated is a black belt in karate, a former bouncer, bodyguard and trumpet player. The last man to arrive holds a doctorate in history and enjoys classical music, painting and military scale modeling.

What is even more extraordinary is that all six men are actually one man, Dr. Slobodan “Danny” Jazarevic, a new vascular surgeon, a specially trained doctor who performs surgery on blood vessels, at Haywood Regional Medical Center.

It would take many dinners with Jazarevic, also called Dr. J., to scratch the surface of everything he has done in his lifetime.

His nine-page resume neatly sums up his many accomplishments. Most recently, he just returned from Iraq where he was the director of clinical operations for the 44th U.S. Army Medical Command in Iraq, 18th Airborne Corps, Fort Bragg, N.C.

As the director, he was in charge of about 17,000 service personnel, six combat army surgical hospitals and four forward surgical teams in addition to all first, second and third echelon U.S. Army medical facilities in the Iraqi theater, including the eight air ambulance companies with 56 helicopters and ground medical transportation assets.

He said there were times when three planeloads of wounded soldiers would arrive within four to five hours or 20 wounded soldiers could arrive in 20 minutes at one of the U.S. military hospitals.

“There were times when I would operate for 37 to 38 hours at a stretch,” the 48-year-old Jazarevic said. “Yet, if a patient reached a U.S. surgical facility alive, his or her chances of survival were more than 95 percent.” Prior to becoming director, he was the chief of vascular surgery and trauma surgery/critical care at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany in 2003.

Since 1994, Jazarevic (pronounced Ya-zar-a-vich) has served in the Florida National Guard as a lieutenant colonel and in capacity of senior surgical consultant to the National Guard’s state surgeon. He has participated in various medical military activities, especially since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

In January 2003, he requested a transfer to Army active duty to contribute to the War on Terror.

Jazarevic was also a trauma and vascular surgeon and a critical care specialist at various hospitals in Palm Beach, Fla., where he introduced endovascular surgery and endovascular repair of abdominal aortic aneurysm in 1999.

Jazarevic graduated from the University of Zagreb and the Yugoslav Military Medical Academy in Belgrade. He interned at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine and the Lankenau Hospital at Jefferson University in Philadelphia. He completed his fellowship in surgical critical care/trauma at the State University of New York at Stony Brook Health Sciences Center, where he was the clinical instructor in surgery.

Jazarevic also served as chief surgeon for the 12th Evacuation Hospital VII Corps in Operation Desert Shield and Desert Storm in Saudi Arabia and Iraq from 1990 to 1991.

He was the Mission Chief Medical Officer for the 502 MASH, or Medical Readiness Exercise in Zambia, Africa, in 1992; he was a special assignment intelligence officer for the territories of former Yugoslavia in the 18th Military Intelligence Battalion and the 66th MI Brigade. He has 28 military honors and decorations, including a Bronze Star, an Order of Military Medical Merit and a Meritorious Service Medal. So how did this larger-than-life, experienced trauma surgeon find Haywood County?

Dr. J. and his wife, Lori, camped in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park for many years. After seeing a house in Waynesville in Log Home Living Magazine, the couple bought it so Lori could have a place to live while her husband was in Germany.

“I love it here; I love the town,” said Lori Jazarevic, director of rehabilitation services at the Brian Center. “We were robbed five times in Palm Beach.”

The couple was married in 1997 and had a baby girl named Gabriella on Oct. 12, 2005.


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Wild Thing's comment........

Obama is so completely out of his element there is no way he would ever get it.

This fine Doctor hit the nail on the head! But even this doctor would not be able to get through to a person like B.Hussein Obama.

More and more Obama is sounding like an elevated street thug, not an educated black man. I have noticed he has lapsed into his ghetto accent lately, it appears this is what he does when he gets ticked off.

God bless this Doctor and his family.


Posted by Wild Thing at August 1, 2008 05:55 AM


Comments

It's a blessing that a man of this caliber has chosen a life of service to our nation and our troops.

Posted by: BobF at August 1, 2008 09:50 AM


Too bad the MSM won't carry Dr Jazarevic's view of Obama's non visit to the wounded troops. This doctor has quite a history of accomplisment. He handles his success far, far better than Obama. The doctor helps others. Obama praises himself. What a contrast. Also, this doctor received no affirmative action.

Posted by: TomR at August 1, 2008 10:25 AM


A crisp right hand salute to Dr. J (Jazarevic)for his candid assesment of the damages Obama inflicted upon our wounded veterans. Obama's lack of empathy for our wounded heros of Iraq endorses his complete lack of qualifications to be our "Commander and Chief". Keoke

Posted by: George H. Matthies AKA Keoke at August 1, 2008 04:47 PM


Dr. J. respects U.S. troops and, in particular, the wounded.
B. Hussein Obama disrespects the troops including the wounded.

Dr. J. has a long list of meaningful accomplishments.
B. Hussein Obama has a thin list of accomplishing anything.

Dr. J. is a proven leader.
B. Hussein Obama is a leader wannabe.

Dr. J. demonstrates his patriotism and love of country every day.
B. Hussein Obama talks about patriotism and knocks the country every day.

The contrast between these two men is enlightening. It should make one wonder how B. Hussein Obama has the nerve to think of himself as President and Commander-in-Chief. It is even worse if enough voters think the same way and put this America hating socialist into the White House.


Posted by: Les at August 1, 2008 05:35 PM


BobF, yes he is really something. For him it say something meant a lot. Of course it won't matter to Obama ick.

Posted by: Wild Thing at August 1, 2008 07:15 PM


Tom, yes what a difference in the two men.

Posted by: Wild Thing at August 1, 2008 07:16 PM


George H. Matthies AKA Keoke, DITTO what you said. Thank you.

Posted by: Wild Thing at August 1, 2008 07:19 PM


Les, thanks those are good comparisons.

Posted by: Wild Thing at August 1, 2008 07:20 PM