South Carolina Air National Guard bids farewell to “Doc” Chow

February 13, 2015

MCENTIRE JOINT NATIONAL GUARD BASE, SC – Surrounded by family, friends, dignitaries and his fellow Swamp Fox, South Carolina Air National Guard Brig. Gen. Jim Chow closed the door on a 30-year military career, Feb. 8.

Dr. Chow is a local physician at the Columbia Skin Clinic specializing in skin cancer surgery and dermatologic reconstructive surgery. He is a nationally-acclaimed doctor and a previous U.S. Air Force Medical Officer of the Year.

South Carolina’s Adjutant General, Maj. Gen. Robert E. Livingston, Jr., lauded Chow for his military medical work and work with veterans.

“He is a treasure and we’re really going to miss him,” Livingston told the crowd. “He is a wonderful person.”

During his 30 years of military service, Chow was a flight doctor, State Air Surgeon and Air National Guard Assistant to the Air Combat Command Air Surgeon. Most recently, he was the Special Assistant to the Director of the Air National Guard providing medical advice to senior military leadership.

One of Chow’s lasting impacts on the military is the work he has done for wounded service members through an initiative he helped create called Patriot Docs. While watching news coverage of the Battle of Fallujah in 2005, Chow said he felt compelled to help. He immediately went to work recruiting the best specialized civilian surgeons in the country to volunteer to help wounded service members returning from battle. Many doctors have since traveled to the military hospital at Landstuhl, Germany to work side-by-side with military doctors, saving lives of severely injured military members.

“We were able to recruit and attract talent, and our survival rate is high downrange,” Chow said of Patriot Docs.

A graduate of the University of South Carolina and the USC School of Medicine, Chow completed a residency at Vanderbilt University before joining the South Carolina Air National Guard in 1984. He is a graduate of the U.S. Air Force’s Air War College and Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.

During his retirement, Dr. Chow was honored with the Legion of Merit, South Carolina Cross and the Guardsman Retirement Medal.

Chow deflected credit of his military service to his family gathered around him.

“If it wasn’t for my wife and children, I would not be here today,” he said.

Chow said even though he retired from the military, he still plans on giving his time to military and veteran causes.

 

 

The South Carolina Air National Guard comprises of nearly 1,500 Airmen who serve their state and nation. The primary unit of the South Carolina Air National Guard is the 169th Fighter Wing. Its mission is to maintain wartime readiness and the ability to mobilize and deploy expeditiously to carry out tactical air missions or combat support activities in the event of a war or military emergency. The South Carolina Air National Guard operates as part of the Total Force of the U.S. military and is fully integrated with the active-duty Air Force. Additionally, members of the South Carolina Air National Guard respond to state and national emergencies as directed by the Governor. The wing flies the F-16 Fighting Falcon, a single-seat, multi-purpose fighter with the ability to fly up to twice the speed of sound. It is capable of performing air-to-air and air-to-ground tactical missions.

 

For additional information on the South Carolina Air National Guard and the 169th Fighter Wing, please visit www.169fw.ang.af.mil or find us on Facebook, Twitter and Flickr.