Colorado Springs, CO, 12th January 2026, ZEX PR WIRE, For the nation’s elite warriors and law enforcement officers, a traumatic brain injury can feel like a dead end. But at the Marcus Institute for Brain Health, they’re getting their lives back, and now, a new leader is stepping up to make sure that vital work continues.
Joseph Catalino, a seasoned leader with a 25-year career spanning military command, the Pentagon, and healthcare operations, has been named Chair of the institute’s new Impact Board. His appointment is a clear signal: the mission to heal the invisible wounds of service is entering a new, critical phase.
The Marcus Institute, part of the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, offers life-changing, no-cost care for those whose lives were derailed by brain injuries sustained in combat, on the force, and in other high-stakes professions. They’ve built a national reputation for taking people who were sidelined and helping them return to their families, their careers, and their communities.
“This institute has a proven record of giving people their lives back,” Catalino says. “These were high-performing professionals—special operations leaders, athletes, law enforcement professionals—some who were effectively removed from society after injury. Through the care provided here, they are returning to leadership roles, starting companies, and sharing their experiences. The outcomes are measurable, and they matter.”
Catalino’s role is to secure the future of that work. The Impact Board was created to ensure the institute’s long-term financial health as it transitions from its original funding from the Marcus Foundation. As Chair, Catalino will lead fundraising, build partnerships, and advocate for the institute’s mission, ensuring its doors stay open for those who need it most.
His background makes him uniquely suited for the challenge. As a Colonel and Medical Service Corps officer in the U.S. Air Force Reserve, he has commanded aeromedical evacuation units and led special operations medical teams. In his civilian career, he was a senior official at the Department of Defense, even serving on the White House COVID-19 Task Force. He now serves as Chief Operating Officer for a technology firm, protecting critical infrastructure with advanced sensing technology.
That unique blend of experience—at the intersection of medicine, high-stakes operations, and long-term recovery—is exactly what the institute needs.
“The work here is disciplined and outcomes-driven,” Catalino says. “You see people move from isolation back into purpose. From a leadership standpoint, there are few efforts with this level of impact per patient.”
Catalino is one of four founding members of the Impact Board which will support major donor outreach and high-profile fundraising events, including a gala this February. His goal is simple: build a sustainable foundation so the institute can continue its disciplined, life-changing work for years to come.
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