The Defense Department's premier scientific meeting, the MHS Research Symposium (MHSRS) is a joint symposium that provides a collaborative environment for military medical care providers with deployment experience, military scientists, academia, and industry to exchange information on research and health care advancements within the areas of Combat Casualty Care, Military Operational Medicine, Clinical and Rehabilitative Medicine, and Military Infectious Disease Research Programs.
You also may be interested in...
Article Around MHS
12/23/2022
A U.S. Army medical team contributed to an investigation into the cause of death of a red panda at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute. The findings will ultimately help to protect the endangered species.
Recommended Content:
Research & Innovation
Article Around MHS
12/14/2022
The 22nd Medical Group unveiled a new simulation lab to provide airmen with hands-on training for future emergency situations on Nov. 30. At the source of the lab is a high-fidelity mannequin with a wide range of life-like features such as breathing, circulation, bleeding, fluid secretions, and speech to deliver realistic simulation-based emergency health care.
Recommended Content:
Health Readiness Support | Research & Innovation
Article Around MHS
12/5/2022
A collaborative study between researchers at Naval Medical Research Center and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and Princeton University has highlighted immune response differences in the coronavirus infection responses between male and female patients.
Recommended Content:
Medical Research and Development | Coronavirus & the MHS Response | Coronavirus
Article Around MHS
11/18/2022
Physicians with the 96th Medical Group completed the first robotic-assisted surgery at Eglin Air Force Base on Nov. 2 Using the unit’s new DaVinci Robotics System, the team performed a successful hernia repair operation.
Recommended Content:
Research & Innovation
Article Around MHS
11/4/2022
Collaboration between U.S. Army medical materiel developers and sustainers means that new devices fielded to the warfighter not only provide the required capabilities, but also longevity and durability in the field, as well as value to the American taxpayer.
Recommended Content:
Research & Innovation | Health Care Technology Management/Medical Devices
Article Around MHS
11/2/2022
Before there was the Naval Medical Research Center (NMRC) there was the Naval Medical Research Institute (NMRI).
Recommended Content:
Our History | Research & Innovation
Article Around MHS
10/26/2022
The Air Force Research Laboratory’s Center for Rapid Innovation, or CRI, held an event Oct. 6 with the U.S. Air Force Reserve Commander’s 445th Airlift Wing for a robotics team to demonstrate the latest Forge System, a pneumatically powered exoskeleton that augments leg strength to reduce fatigue, increase endurance, and offset weight.
Recommended Content:
Physical Fitness | Research & Innovation
Article Around MHS
10/25/2022
Impaired or inappropriate activation of a cellular stress response pathway is a common underlying factor for many human diseases, including those that affect our military warfighters and veterans, such as traumatic brain injury, posttraumatic stress disorder, various cancers, and diabetes.
Recommended Content:
Medical Research and Development
Video
10/14/2022
During this year’s Military Health System Research Symposium, participants of the Young Investigators Competition presented a series of scientific research focused on warfighter health.
Recommended Content:
MHS Research Symposium
Article
10/5/2022
Scientific session at the Military Health System Research Symposium highlights research addressing critical military medical issues.
Recommended Content:
Research & Innovation | MHS Research Symposium
Article Around MHS
9/30/2022
Mountain climbing is risky business. When unacclimatized individuals rapidly ascend to altitudes greater than 8,000 feet, they put themselves at risk for suffering from high-altitude illnesses. The addition of hard physical exercise, typical of a military mission, increases this level of risk. Detecting these illnesses prior to occurrence has the potential to save lives.
Recommended Content:
Research & Innovation | Physical Fitness
Article
9/26/2022
Gain more from your health care with these technological advances.
Recommended Content:
MHS Research Symposium
Video
9/21/2022
The Joint Project Manager for Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Medical’s Rapid Opioid Countermeasure System’s Dr. Saumil Shah discusses his Military Health Research Symposium 2022 award-winning research into increasing warfighter readiness and reduced operational risk to opioid threats. Dr. Shah’s team provided access to a point-of-injury countermeasure such as the 10mg naloxone auto-injector, ahead of schedule and under cost, is a major step forward to protect and maintain the readiness of the joint force. MHSRS 2022 provides a collaborative setting for the exchange of information between military providers with deployment experience, research and academic scientists, international partners, and industry on research and related health care initiatives falling under the topic areas of Combat Casualty Care, Operational Medicine, Clinical and Rehabilitative Medicine, Medical Simulation and Information Sciences, and Infectious Diseases.
Recommended Content:
MHS Research Symposium
Showing results 16 - 30
Page 2 of 13