Supporting National Homeland Defense with Medical and Public Health Preparedness
The Civil Military Medicine Division (CMM) ensures the provision of the highest possible level and quality of health service support to military missions and domestic crisis that are outside the realm of major combat operations. Heavily involved with homeland disaster response—CMM works closely with groups at the federal, state, local, and tribal levels to ensure the safety and health of Service Members, Beneficiaries, and the American people.
CMM Divisions
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Article
9/9/2016
![Army Maj. Brad Cunningham provides a slit lamp examination during a free optometry clinic at Juarez-Lincoln High School in Mission, Texas, during a weeklong humanitarian mission to provide vision services to people living in the Rio Grande Valley. (Courtesy photo)](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/web/20161020051113im_/https://www.health.mil/~/media/MHS/Photos/Remote%20Area%20Medical%20mission.ashx?mw=120)
RAM is an organization that provides medical care through mobile clinics in underserved, isolated, or impoverished communities
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Civil Military Medicine, Civil Support
Article
3/25/2016
![Army Staff Sgt. James Soroka, left, and Army Sgt. Brandon Dukes, both medics assigned to the 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade practice endotracheal intubation.](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/web/20161020051113im_/https://www.health.mil/~/media/MHS/Photos/EMT.ashx?mw=120)
Womack Army Medical Center partnered with Fayetteville Technical Community College to provide the opportunity for Army medics a the opportunity to attend EMT-Paramedic training
Recommended Content:
Health Readiness, Civil Military Medicine
Article
11/13/2015
![Matthew Alderman (center), a Darnell-Cookman School of the Medical Arts student, observes Navy Hospital Corpsman 3rd Class Daniel Anderson (right), of Naval Hospital Jacksonville’s physical therapy department, performing lower-back therapy on Allyson VanHook. Alderman is participating in the hospital’s annual Science, Service, Medicine and Mentoring (S2M2) program. The program allows selected students to receive real-world experiences in patient care areas—from the operating room and emergency department to pharmacy and physical and occupational therapy. (U.S. Navy file photo by Jacob Sippel).](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/web/20161020051113im_/https://www.health.mil/~/media/MHS/Photos/JACKSONVILLE%20S2M2.ashx?mw=120)
Eight Naval Hospital Jacksonville clinicians – a pharmacist, dentist, general surgeon, nurse, obstetrician/gynecologist, independent duty corpsman and two family medicine physicians – shared their stories in Navy medicine
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Civil Military Medicine
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