Cannon Woodbury is currently a second-year medical student at Texas A&M University College of Medicine. Cannon was first introduced to medical simulation while serving on the supplies committee for 2018 Disaster Day, a mass casualty incident simulation with participation from over 400 students spanning many different health disciplines. He was also the Bryan/College Station site coordinator for Texas Two Step CPR. Texas Two Step is a project dedicated to training layman in an easy to learn bystander CPR and in 2018 the BCS site alone trained over 250 citizens. He also has participated in a Tactical Combat Casualty Care course and used that training to help lead several Stop The Bleed training classes--an initiative from the American College of Surgeons encouraging people to learn how to control life threatening bleeding. In addition to seeking his MD, Cannon is also pursuing his Masters of Engineering as a part of the inaugural A&M EnMed class. He has already begun applying some engineering know-how to medical simulation by building a hemorrhage simulator that actually bleeds until stopped with a tourniquet; that hemorrhage simulator has already made an appearance at a Stop The Bleed class. In his free time, Cannon enjoys serving as the president of the Wilderness Medicine interest group, training with the A&M triathlon team, and reading science fiction.