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JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-FORT SAM HOUSTON – (Jan. 13, 2026) – Representatives of Japan’s National Defense Medical College (NDMC) met with leadership and research scientists of Naval Medical Research Unit (NAMRU) San Antonio at the Battlefield Health and Trauma Research Institute. The visit, led by Dr. Manabu Kinoshita, NDMC’s chairman professor, Department of Immunology and Microbiology, continues a sustained partnership between NAMRU San Antonio and NDMC to enhance each other’s capabilities to counteract emerging threats, benefiting military health as well as global health security. Navy Medicine Research & Development (NMR&D) contributes directly to positive working relationships with partner nation militaries, keeping the scope of Department of War capabilities wide, and at the ready, to address emerging threats aboard. NAMRU San Antonio, part of NMR&D, conducts gap-driven combat casualty care, craniofacial, and directed energy research in support of Navy, Marine Corps and joint U.S. warfighter health readiness and lethality while engaged in routine and expeditionary operations. (U.S. Navy photo by Burrell Parmer, NAMRU San Antonio Public Affairs/Released)
Hospital Corpsman Xander Jacobson, right, operates a near infrared Traumatic Brain Injury assessment device during an end-user touchpoint hosted by the Operational Medical Systems Program Management Office, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 14, 2026. Jacobson, originally from Cherry Point, North Carolina, is assigned to the labor and delivery unit at Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune. The touchpoint at NMCCL is one in a series of planned engagements with prospective end users to help the OPMED Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health project management office refine the development of field-portable TBI detection devices designed for use in austere, remote locations across the globe. OPMED, part of the Defense Health Agency, partners with stakeholders across the Joint Force to develop, acquire, and field medical devices, treatments, and frontline care solutions for military medical providers to fill capability gaps with the speed of relevance. (Defense Health Agency photo by T. T. Parish/Released)
U.S. Navy hospital corpsman uses a tablet-based Traumatic Brain Injury assessment application during an end-user touchpoint hosted by the Operational Medical Systems Program Management Office, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 14, 2026. The touchpoint at NMCCL is one in a series of planned engagements with prospective end users to help the OPMED Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health project management office refine the development of field-portable TBI detection devices designed for use in austere, remote locations across the globe. OPMED, part of the Defense Health Agency, partners with stakeholders across the Joint Force to develop, acquire, and field medical devices, treatments, and frontline care solutions for military medical providers to fill capability gaps with the speed of relevance. (Defense Health Agency photo by T. T. Parish/Released)
U.S. Navy medical officers provide feedback after participating in an end-user touchpoint hosted by the Operational Medical Systems Program Management Office, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 14, 2026. The touchpoint at NMCCL is one in a series of planned engagements with prospective end users to help the OPMED Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health project management office refine the development of field-portable TBI detection devices designed for use in austere, remote locations across the globe. OPMED, part of the Defense Health Agency, partners with stakeholders across the Joint Force to develop, acquire, and field medical devices, treatments, and frontline care solutions for military medical providers to fill capability gaps with the speed of relevance. (Defense Health Agency photo by T. T. Parish/Released)
Hospital Corpsmen assigned to Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune use a tablet-based Traumatic Brain Injury assessment application during an end-user touchpoint hosted by the Operational Medical Systems Program Management Office, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 14, 2026. The touchpoint at NMCCL is one in a series of planned engagements with prospective end users to help the OPMED Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health project management office refine the development of field-portable TBI detection devices designed for use in austere, remote locations across the globe. OPMED, part of the Defense Health Agency, partners with stakeholders across the Joint Force to develop, acquire, and field medical devices, treatments, and frontline care solutions for military medical providers to fill capability gaps with the speed of relevance. (Defense Health Agency photo by T. T. Parish/Released)
Team members with the Operational Medical Systems Program Management Office joined dozens of U.S. Navy corpsmen and medical officers for an end-user touchpoint at Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, to assess the progress of the TBI Field Assessment Program, January 14, 2026. The touchpoint at NMCCL is one in a series of planned engagements with prospective end users to help the OPMED Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health project management office refine the development of field-portable TBI detection devices designed for use in austere, remote locations across the globe. OPMED, part of the Defense Health Agency, partners with stakeholders across the Joint Force to develop, acquire, and field medical devices, treatments, and frontline care solutions for military medical providers to fill capability gaps with the speed of relevance. (Defense Health Agency photo by T. T. Parish/Released)
A Traumatic Brain Injury assessment device sits on display during an end-user touchpoint hosted by the Operational Medical Systems Program Management Office, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 14, 2026. The touchpoint at NMCCL is one in a series of planned engagements with prospective end users to help the OPMED Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health project management office refine the development of field-portable TBI detection devices designed for use in austere, remote locations across the globe. OPMED, part of the Defense Health Agency, partners with stakeholders across the Joint Force to develop, acquire, and field medical devices, treatments, and frontline care solutions for military medical providers to fill capability gaps with the speed of relevance. (Defense Health Agency photo by T. T. Parish/Released)
Hospital Corpsmen assigned to Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune learn about the Traumatic Brain Injury Field Assessment Program during an end-user touchpoint hosted by the Operational Medical Systems Program Management Office, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 14, 2026. The touchpoint at NMCCL is one in a series of planned engagements with prospective end users to help the OPMED Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health project management office refine the development of field-portable TBI detection devices designed for use in austere, remote locations across the globe. OPMED, part of the Defense Health Agency, partners with stakeholders across the Joint Force to develop, acquire, and field medical devices, treatments, and frontline care solutions for military medical providers to fill capability gaps with the speed of relevance. (Defense Health Agency photo by T. T. Parish/Released)
Hospital Corpsmen assigned to Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune learn about the Traumatic Brain Injury Field Assessment Program during an end-user touchpoint hosted by the Operational Medical Systems Program Management Office, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 14, 2026. The touchpoint at NMCCL is one in a series of planned engagements with prospective end users to help the OPMED Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health project management office refine the development of field-portable TBI detection devices designed for use in austere, remote locations across the globe. OPMED, part of the Defense Health Agency, partners with stakeholders across the Joint Force to develop, acquire, and field medical devices, treatments, and frontline care solutions for military medical providers to fill capability gaps with the speed of relevance. (Defense Health Agency photo by T. T. Parish/Released)
Hospital Corpsman 3rd Class Mikayla Bobbing provides feedback after participating in an end-user touchpoint hosted by the Operational Medical Systems Program Management Office, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 14, 2026. Bobbing, originally from the Philadelphia area, is assigned to the Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune. The touchpoint at NMCCL is one in a series of planned engagements with prospective end users to help the OPMED Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health project management office refine the development of field-portable TBI detection devices designed for use in austere, remote locations across the globe. OPMED, part of the Defense Health Agency, partners with stakeholders across the Joint Force to develop, acquire, and field medical devices, treatments, and frontline care solutions for military medical providers to fill capability gaps with the speed of relevance. (Defense Health Agency photo by T. T. Parish/Released)
Hospital Corpsman 3rd Class Mikayla Bobbing operates a near infrared Traumatic Brain Injury assessment device during an end-user touchpoint hosted by the Operational Medical Systems Program Management Office, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 14, 2026. Bobbing, originally from the Philadelphia area, is assigned to the Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune. The touchpoint at NMCCL is one in a series of planned engagements with prospective end users to help the OPMED Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health project management office refine the development of field-portable TBI detection devices designed for use in austere, remote locations across the globe. OPMED, part of the Defense Health Agency, partners with stakeholders across the Joint Force to develop, acquire, and field medical devices, treatments, and frontline care solutions for military medical providers to fill capability gaps with the speed of relevance. (Defense Health Agency photo by T. T. Parish/Released)
Hospital Corpsman 3rd Class Mikayla Bobbing operates a near infrared Traumatic Brain Injury assessment device during an end-user touchpoint hosted by the Operational Medical Systems Program Management Office, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 14, 2026. Bobbing, originally from the Philadelphia area, is assigned to the Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune. The touchpoint at NMCCL is one in a series of planned engagements with prospective end users to help the OPMED Warfighter Readiness, Performance and Brain Health project management office refine the development of field-portable TBI detection devices designed for use in austere, remote locations across the globe. OPMED, part of the Defense Health Agency, partners with stakeholders across the Joint Force to develop, acquire, and field medical devices, treatments, and frontline care solutions for military medical providers to fill capability gaps with the speed of relevance. (Defense Health Agency photo by T. T. Parish/Released)

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