As a result of this difference of opinion between GovGuam and HiComTerPacls and the contemplated transfer of administration to the Department of the Interior, the Chief of Naval Operations directed that the matter be held in abeyance.* The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery meanwhile suggested that the whole problem of training medical and dentalassistants be reviewed by HiComTerPacls and a definite program for their training and subsequent employment be formulated. Until this was done, the Bureau recommendedthat training be conducted by the Public Health Department, Guam, and the civil administration dispensaries and directed toward the field of preventive medicine with emphasis on first aid procedures, sanitation, and insect control.” The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery’s opinion concerning medical and dental training for the natives was concurred in by the senior medical officers at Guam. The Commanding Officer, School of Medical Assistants, considered that the “high plane” of training could be reduced, and, in May 1950, proposed that medical students receive basic pre-school training at the Pacific Islands Teacher Training School (PITTS) and in a two year course at Guam which wouldeliminate much of training in procedures that they would not have a chance to practice on their homeislands." The Commanding Officer. U. S. Naval Medical Center, Guam, noted that the medical school was a “noble experiment” but that the curriculum exceeded the capacity of the students to assimilate and extended beyondthe scope of future employment as “assistants.” He also pointed out that much of what they learned was useless because of lack of medical facilities on small islands or because of the nature of the people with whom they would work: “Teaching of psychiatry with its redundantclassifications of mental diseases to individuals that bow to the laws of taboo andothernative superstitions appear super- fluous.” The recommendations to lower the “high plane” of the teaching were not acted upon because planning for the future status of the school under eventual Department of the Interior administration overWeighed academic disagreements. Because the Naval Medical Center . CNOItr ser 0022P22 dtd 5 Jul yo. _ ChBuMedltr ser 00386 dtd 15 Jun 4a. ot Co, School of Medical Assistants. ltr ser NG(12)/Li-r dtd 10 Jul so. CO. U.S. Naval Medical Center. Guam. rst end dtd ro Jul 50 on rérd. 931

Select target paragraph3