A luxury reinforcement for Naval Health
The most important theater of operations is sometimes not the sea, but the well-being of those who patrol it. This Friday, the Secretary of the Navy (Semar) armed its ranks with a new type of arsenal: 58 doctors, nurses and dentists recent graduates of its Graduate School.
The ceremony at the Center for Naval Studies in Health Sciences saw 38 women and 20 men pass through. Among them, two officers of the Nicaraguan Navy. All are now specialists in critical areas: from Medicine and Psychology to Hospital Architecture.
A commitment that goes beyond the uniform
Admiral Francisco Guillermo Escamilla Cázares made the mission clear. It’s not just about titles. Addressing the graduates, he stated:
“The commitment they make is not only with the Secretary of the Navy but with each person who will depend on their knowledge.”
Your point is key. Health, he said, is decisive. A healthy body is synonymous with an efficient Naval Force. The operation of the entire institution depends on it.
Representing the Secretary of the Navy, Escamilla Cázares explained the central role of the Naval Health Service:
“Its main mission is to ensure that active personnel remain in optimal condition to fulfill their duty wherever the nation requires it.”
The new graduates took on the challenge. Captain Maikold Contreras Aguilera spoke for everyone when he said that this achievement is “a renewed commitment to our Institution and to our Homeland”.
The School Director, Captain Eugenia Pina Sánchez Arellano, welcomed them to a larger team. A team that, from naval clinics and hospitals, also extends its work to the civilian population when it is most needed.
The final message was clear: this is achieved with communication, respect for human rights and constant work. Everything adds up. And today, they added 58 professionals ready to serve.




