Story by Mikala McCurry | Air Force Culture and Language Center | 11.09.2022
The Defense Institute for Medical Operations’ Mobile Training Team recently conducted a life-saving course for several Gabonese military and civilian organizations on Outbreak Detection and Response in Libreville, Gabon, with support from members of the Language Enabled Airman Program....
Story by Jeremy R Dunn | Air Force Research Laboratory | 09.30.2022
The Defense Institute for Medical Operations, or DIMO, will mark 20 years of delivering medical courses supporting U.S. embassy and combatant command strategic objectives in October 2022. DIMO was created in 2002 when the Air Force Institute for Global Health merged with the Navy’s Defense Healthcare Management Institute and is located at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas....
Story by Mikala McCurry | Air Force Culture and Language Center | 05.02.2022
A team of French Language Enabled Airman Program Scholars partnered with the Defense Institute for Medical Operations to provide language support for a mental health Mobile Training Team in N’jamena, Chad....
Story by James M Mitchell | Air Force Research Laboratory | 10.08.2020
The Defense Institute for Medical Operations (DIMO) is a joint security cooperation school for which the Air Force is the implementing agent (JSCET/ Army Regulation 12–15, SECNAVINST 4950.4B, AFI 16–105). DIMO was established in Oct. 2002 when the USAF Institute for Global Health merged with the Navy’s Defense Healthcare Management Institute....
Story by Petty Officer 2nd Class Shayla Hamilton | Navy Medicine Training Support Command | 11.08.2018
The Defense Institute for Medical Operations (DIMO) was selected as a recipient of the 2018 International Trauma Life Support (ITLS) Ambassador Award, Nov. 8....
Story by Staff Sgt. Adam Grant | Air Forces Southern | 01.26.2015
There’s an old saying, “give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.”...
Story by Staff Sgt. Daryl Knee | 52nd Fighter Wing | 06.01.2012
The four-day Critical Lifesaving Skills for First Responders course culminated in a mass casualty exercise here June 1.