Army Medical Services

Medical arm of the British Army From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Army Medical Services

The Army Medical Services (AMS) is the organisation responsible for administering the corps that deliver medical, veterinary, dental and nursing services in the British Army. It is headquartered at the former Staff College, Camberley, near the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.[1]

Quick Facts Country, Branch ...
Army Medical Services
Cap badges of the four former constituent corps
Country United Kingdom
Branch British Army
RoleMedical
Size2 Corps
Garrison/HQCamberley
Commanders
Master-GeneralMajor General Timothy Hodgetts
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On 15 November 2024, with the exception of the Royal Army Veterinary Corps, the constituent corps of the AMS amalgamated to form a new Corps, the Royal Army Medical Service. The AMS long predates any of the four constituent Corps, with the term dating back at least to the Napoleonic Wars,[2] and the new Corps will take the precedence formerly held by the RAMC in the British Army’s order of battle.[3]

Role

AMS is responsible for administering the corps that deliver medical, veterinary, dental and nursing services in the British Army. These are:[4]

AMS contributes to the conservation of fighting strength and morale of the Army and advises commanders on matters of health and disease.[5]

The Defence Medical Services, by contrast, is an umbrella adjectival term, and should not been seen as equivalent to a command or an Army Corps as constituted under the Armed Forces Act 2006.[6][circular reference][7]

Administration and leadership

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Perspective

The Army Medical Services are administered by Headquarters Army Medical Directorate at Andover, previously under the leadership of the Director General Army Medical Services (DGAMS[8]), formerly Major General Jeremy Rowan. The Director General answered to the Adjutant-General, and his role was to promote effective medical, dental and veterinary health services for the Army and provide a policy focus for individual medical training, doctrine and force development. The post was disestablished after 2016.[9]

A Freedom of Information request identified that from 2018, "day to day responsibility for medical policy and capability development" would "lie at Brigadier level," but did not indicate the title of that particular post. As of March 2019, a Brigadier is employed within the senior Army ranks as Senior Health Advisor, who "Monitors and assesses the health of the Army to assist Director Personnel in the provision of Health Policy, provides policy oversight and assurance for Commander Field Army in the generation and delivery of medical operational capability, and is directly responsible for the provision of primary care services to the Army and community mental health services to Defence."[10]

List of directors general

Master-Generals

See also

References

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