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Dr. Gregory Rogers

Board of Directors

Professional Background:
- Graduated medical school at Oklahoma State University College of
Osteopathic Medicine in 1983
- Served in West Germany as a flight surgeon for the U.S. Army 1984-1987
- Private Practice for two years in the state of Washington
- Served in Florida as the Chief of Aerospace Medicine at 45 th Space Wing
and worked at Patrick Air Force Base and Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
from 1989 to 1993
- Served as the Chief of Aerospace Medicine at Vance Air Force Base, OK
from 1994-1995
- Worked in emergency departments and private practice from 1996 to 2011
- Served as the Medical Director for the McAlester Army Ammunition Plant
from 2011 until retirement in 2025

Major Military Courses:
- Aviation Medicine Course – Fort Rucker, AL 1984
- Military Indoctrination for Medical Service Officers – Sheppard AFB, TX 1989
- U.S. Navy Water Survival Course – Pensacola NAS, FL 1989
- U.S. Air Force Water Survival Course – Homestead AFB, FL 1990
- STS (Space Shuttle) Orbiter Familiarization Course – Cape Canaveral AFS, FL 1990
- Aerospace Medicine Course – Brooks AFB, TX 1990
- NASA Flight Surgeon Certification Course – Johnson Space Center, TX 1990
- Space Operations Orientation Course – Cape Canaveral AFS, FL 1990
- Joint STARS Development Program Orientation – Melbourne, FL 1990
- Global Medicine Course – Brooks AFB, TX 1992 and 1995
- Aerospace Centrifuge Training (F-16 configuration) – Holloman AFB, NM 1994
- Top Knife II (F-16D High Performance Training Course) – Luke AFB, AZ 1994
- U.S. Army Occupational Medicine Course – Fort Sam Houston, TX 2012

Doctor Rogers has served in the United States’ Department of Defense (DoD) both on active duty and as a civilian employee for more that two decades. He support both manned and unmanned space launches for Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and Kennedy Space Center. He has been a recognized expert in a number of fields, providing written documents to guide worldwide DoD physicians on how to provide emergency efforts in support of space shuttle landing contingencies. He is a coauthor of the 2014 article in the journal MILITARY MEDICINE for the article titled: Investigation of an Outbreak of Anemia Cases at an Army Trinitrotoluene Munitions Production Plant From 2004 to 2005 and Subsequent Surveillance 2005-2013.
Dr. Rogers has also provided many official presentations to elements within the DoD and provided lectures to the U.S. Navy Professional Development Symposium to American military forces for the past six years. In April of 2024, he received official clearance for and presented a lecture that was titled: HUMAN FACTORS IN
IDENTIFICATION OF AIRCRAFT, MILITARY DRONES, AND OTHER AERIAL PHENOMENA. During the course of this lecture, Dr. Rogers designated Unidentified Aerial/Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) craft as a legitimate source of concern to the DoD and provided guidance for interviewing witnesses for both standard aircraft mishaps and events involving the identified occurrences of UAPs.

Dr. Rogers currently lives with his wife Judy in McAlester, Oklahoma

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