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Michigan State Police Chief Deputy Director Lt. Col. Aimee Brimacombe, center, looks on as recruits are congratulated by Director Col. James Grady, left, during a graduation ceremony for the 145th ...
Two troopers allege Lt. Col. Aimee Brimacombe pressured a prosecutor to bring criminal charges against them after they arrested her friend's brother. ... 2024, at the Lansing Center in downtown ...
The 6th Medical Logistics Management Center (6MLMC), a direct reporting unit of U.S. Army Forces Command at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, with administrative control and training readiness authority to the Medical Research and Development Command at Fort Detrick, Maryland, and serves as the Army's only deployable medical materiel management center worldwide.
U.S. Army Public Health Center, previously known as the U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion & Preventive Medicine (USACHPPM) prior to 1 October 2009; it and the U.S. Army Veterinary Command (VETCOM) were merged in 2011 to create USAPHC.
USARIEM traces its institutional lineage back to 1927 and the Harvard Fatigue Laboratory.That facility fostered two institutions that ultimately merged. The first was the Climatic Research Laboratory in Lawrence, MA (1943–54), which relocated to Natick in 1954 under the new name of the Environmental Protection Research Division (EPRD) of the U.S. Army’s Quartermaster Research and ...
The U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence (MEDCoE) is located at Fort Sam Houston, Joint Base San Antonio, Texas. MEDCoE comprises the 32d Medical Brigade, the U.S. Army Medical Professional Training Brigade (MPTB), and the AMEDD Noncommissioned Officers Academy (NCOA). It serves the U.S. Army in educating and training all of its medical ...
Constituted 23 June 1942 in the Regular Army as 10th Field Hospital; Activated on 6 July 1942 at Camp Bowie, Texas; Inactivated on 4 November 1945 at Camp Myles Standish, Massachusetts. Reactivated on 25 August 1949 in Germany before being allotted on 5 May 1951 to the Regular Army.
The Army Nurse Corps originated in 1901, the Dental Corps began in 1911, the Veterinary Corps in 1916, the Medical Service Corps emerged in 1917 (during WW I the Sanitary Corps was created as a temporary organization to relieve U.S. Army physicians from a variety of duties), [3] and the Army Medical Specialist Corps came into existence in 1947.