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The United States Army Medical Command, Vietnam (USAMEDCOMV) provided Echelon/Role 3 Health Service Support to units of the United States Army, Vietnam (USAV). It was a Table of Distribution and Allowances organization created by consolidating the staffs of the 44th Medical Brigade and the USAV Surgeon's Office. This action was taken as part of ...
United States Army Medical Command, Vietnam, Long Binh Post, Republic of Vietnam, 30 April 1972; United States Army Medical Command, Europe, Heidelberg, Germany, 21 September 1978; 7th Medical Command, Heidelberg, Germany, 15 October 1994 [148] 30th Medical Command, reorganized and redesignated as the 30th Medical Brigade
0–9. 6th Medical Logistics Management Center (United States Army) 15th Brigade Support Battalion (United States) 28th Combat Support Hospital (United States) 45th Portable Surgical Hospital; 93rd Evacuation Hospital (United States) 232d Medical Battalion; 261st Medical Battalion; 274th Forward Surgical Team (Airborne) 326th Medical Battalion ...
The mission of the Headquarters, Medical Brigade (Provisional) was to "Provide medical service to the United States Army, Vietnam (USARV) through command and control of operating units of the 1st Logistical Command medical service system; developing; [sic] refine and implement operations; reinforce the medical service of the Army divisions ...
The following are former United States Army medical facilities. This category includes medical care facilities (hospitals, clinics, etc), but excludes strictly medical research facilities (not primarily for patient care) run by the Army, which have their own category.
The following is a list of units of the United States Army during the Vietnam War. ... 44th Medical Brigade ... the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
0–9. 3rd Medical Command (Deployment Support) ... United States Army Medical Command, Vietnam This page was last edited on 15 February 2024, at 07:53 (UTC). ...
On 24 May, the Group S-2 and Liaison Officer, Major Bernard Aabel (later Chief of the Army Medical Service Corps and Namesake of Aabel Hall at the U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, together with the S-2s of the 175th and 176th Medical Battalions (Lts Eugene P. Hickey and John N. Crichton) and three medical officers and 54 enlisted men ...