Army Reserve Medical Command

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Army Reserve Medical Command This is the Official page of the Army Reserve Medical Command. The U.S. Army Surgeon General. The AR-MEDCOM mirrors the active component U.S. Army.

The Army Reserve Medical Command (ARMEDCOM) provides trained, equipped, ready, skill-rich Citizen-Soldiers, to meet global requirements for unified land operations. ARMEDCOM is a reserve unit based in Pinellas Park, Florida, with subordinate units dispersed across the Continental United States. If you're looking for the official source of information about ARMEDCOM please visit the official websi

te. AR-MEDCOM History:
Civis Militis Medicus (Civilian Soldier Medic)

In late 2003, the Chief of the Army Reserve (CAR) directed the creation of a new functional medical command in support of the Army Reserve’s medical efforts toward the Global War on Terrorism. Army Reserve Medical Command (AR-MEDCOM) was a shared vision of the CAR, and the U.S. Their vision was to give centralized command and control of all U.S. Army Reserve medical units and Soldiers to one authority, and to prepare them to rapidly respond when needed for any contingency at home or abroad. Army Medical Command (USAMEDCOM) by centralizing the management of all Army Reserve Army Medical Department (AMEDD) Soldiers and units. This total reorganization of medical assets streamlines their ability to receive administrative, logistical and training support and improves the quality of the medical care they deliver to all Soldiers on and off the battlefield. The AR-MEDCOM is a direct-reporting command to the United States Army Reserve Command, and is a medical force provider for Forces Command (FORSCOM) and the U.S. Army Medical Command (USAMEDCOM)

The Department of the Army approved the concept in February of 2004, and the Army Reserve Medical Command (AR-MEDCOM) was established at Pinellas Park, Florida on October 16, 2005. The Army Reserve Medical Command (AR-MEDCOM) vision is to be the Army Reserve’s premier Medical Command by providing enhanced medical skills that serve as a force multiplier delivering vital medical capabilities essential to the Total Force; and ARMEDCOM’s top four priorities, care for the force, develop leaders, train and equip at all levels, and reinforce accountability and discipline. The Army Reserve Medical Command mission is to provide trained, equipped, ready, skill-rich Citizen-Soldiers, to meet medical requirements globally. ARMEDCOM provides Command and Control for Table of Distribution and Allowance (TDA) Reserve medical units within the Contiguous United States. Command and Control of the TOE Reserve medical units is carried out by two additional commands: 807th MDSC covers west of Ohio and 3rd MDSC covers units to the east of Ohio. Subordinate units:

Army Reserve Medical Command is responsible for all Table of Distribution and Allowance (TDA) reserve medical units within CONUS.

• AMEDD Professional Management Command (APMC) at Forest Park, Georgia
• Central Medical Area Readiness Support Group (CE-MARSG) at Fort Sheridan, Illinois
• Medical Readiness and Training Command (MRTC) at Fort Sam Houston, Texas
• Northeast Medical Area Readiness Support Group (NE-MARSG) at Fort Wadsworth, New York
• Southeast Medical Area Readiness Support Group (SE-MARSG) at Nashville, Tennessee
• Western Medical Area Readiness Support Group (WE-MARSG) at San Pablo, California

The Command’s threefold mission is to consolidate and centrally manage all Army Reserve medical units and Soldiers; enhance readiness, medical support and medical training, and streamlines mobilization timelines; and finally, seamlessly synchronize and align Army Reserve medical units with the U.S. Army Medical Command and the Office of the Surgeon General. It currently has Soldiers and medical units across the United States and Puerto Rico with major subordinate headquarters focusing on training, professional management, and command and control of regional medical units, continuing to support the Global War on Terrorism with the same operational tempo it has since its inception. With the continued transformation of the Army Reserve, AR-MEDCOM divided into three two-star medical commands in October 2008, with the advent of the 3rd and 807th Medical Commands (Deployment Support) (MDSC) to better serve the needs of our nation. The AR-MEDCOM is part of a long tradition of medical support within the U.S. Army Medical Department, originally known as “the Hospital” in the 18th century, was established by Congress on July 27, 1775, and staffed by civilian physicians. Its first decades saw the Department solely as a wartime expedient until it was permanently established in April 1818. The National Defense Act of 1920 divided the Army into Regular, National Guard and Reserve components. The Medical Department at that time consisted of six “officer-only” corps: Medical, Dental, Veterinary, Sanitary, Medical Administrative, and Army Nurse Corps. Enlisted medical Soldiers of various specialties formed a seventh group. After World War II, the new Medical Service Corps assumed the duties of the Sanitary and Administrative Corps. In 1973, the Office of the Surgeon General undertook steps to reorganize the Army Medical Department by establishing the US Army Health Services Command. Headquartered at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, the headquarters was given command over all Army Medical Activities in the continental US. In 1993, a new provisional US Army Medical Command (MEDCOM) began assuming the role of the Health Services Command and absorbing other Medical Department elements, and new Dental and Veterinary Commands formed under the MEDCOM, which became an official US Army major command in 1994. Today, the AR-MEDCOM continues its place in the history of Army medicine, supporting the global operations with the same operational tempo it has since the war began.

After more than 30 years of distinguished military service, Army Reserve Medical Command celebrated the promotion of Pau...
31/05/2026

After more than 30 years of distinguished military service, Army Reserve Medical Command celebrated the promotion of Paul A. Lucci to brigadier general, at the C.W. Bill Young Armed Forces Reserves Center, in Pinellas Park, Fla. May 31, 2026.

Surrounded by family, friends and fellow Soldiers, Brig. Gen. Lucci shared the milestone with those who have supported him throughout his journey, including his parents and wife, Pattria. During the ceremony, AR-MEDCOM Commanding General Beth Salisbury reflected on Lucci's decades of dedicated service and leadership, highlighting the lasting impact he has made on Soldiers, units and the Army Medical community throughout his career.

Having served and led multiple commands over more than three decades, Lucci's promotion represents a legacy of selfless service, professional excellence and an enduring commitment to building combat-ready formations across the Army Reserve.

Command teams from across the Army Reserve Medical Command came together on the shores of Spa Beach in St. Petersburg, F...
31/05/2026

Command teams from across the Army Reserve Medical Command came together on the shores of Spa Beach in St. Petersburg, Fla., for a physical training yoga session led by the AR-MEDCOM Holistic Health and Fitness (H2F) team.

The beach workout allowed leaders to bond outside of the office while reinforcing the importance of readiness, resilience and leading from the front. Through H2F's integrated approach to physical, mental and nutritional fitness, Army Reserve leaders continue building combat-ready formations prepared to meet the demands of any mission.

(U.S. Army photos by Staff Sgt. Jerry Zuetrong)

29/05/2026

Soldiers from Army Reserve Medical Command subordinate units traveled to Kelly Field in San Antonio, May 4-8, 2026, to support the Theater Lead Agent for Medical Materiel mission, helping ensure upcoming U.S. Army Reserve training exercises are equipped with the medical supplies and logistical support needed to sustain real-world medical operations. The effort strengthens readiness by ensuring Soldiers and medical providers have the resources necessary to support care on tomorrow’s battlefield. (U.S. Army video by Staff Sgt. Jerry T. Zuetrong)

Congratulations to the 807th Theater Medical Command's Squad 20, the FY26 Army Reserve Best Squad champions.
28/05/2026

Congratulations to the 807th Theater Medical Command's Squad 20, the FY26 Army Reserve Best Squad champions.

💪 H2F stands for Holistic Health and Fitness, and it's the Army's system for reimagining how Soldiers approach their hea...
27/05/2026

💪 H2F stands for Holistic Health and Fitness, and it's the Army's system for reimagining how Soldiers approach their health, readiness, and performance.

Here's a breakdown:

📍 The Core Idea
H2F is changing the Army's culture of health and fitness to help meet the demands of modern combat. It empowers and equips Soldiers to take charge of their health, fitness, and well-being, optimizing individual performance while preventing injury or disease.

📍 The Model
Modeled after Special Forces and professional and collegiate athletics, H2F moves away from a one-size-fits-all approach and acknowledges that every Soldier is unique and different units have different missions.

📍 The Five Domains
H2F takes a holistic approach by addressing five readiness domains: physical, mental, nutrition, sleep, and spiritual. The program is built on the understanding that each domain impacts the others, so Soldiers need education and resources to maximize performance on and off the battlefield.

➡️ Follow along with Sgt. 1st Class Abel Aungst as he explores what H2F looks like for him, as an athlete and Army Reserve Soldier.

(U.S. Army Reserve video by Staff Sgt. Cameron Hershberger, Calvin Reimhold, Maj. James Kim and Sgt. First Class Abel Aungst)

💪 H2F stands for Holistic Health and Fitness, and it's the Army's s...

SAN ANTONIO – U.S. Army Reserve Soldiers in and around the organizational umbrella of the Pinellas Park, Florida-based A...
27/05/2026

SAN ANTONIO – U.S. Army Reserve Soldiers in and around the organizational umbrella of the Pinellas Park, Florida-based Army Reserve Medical Command have been synchronizing efforts with the U.S. Air Force to conduct pre-check inventory packing, or PCIP, and transportation of medical materiel and other relevant supplies with the Theater Lead Agent for Medical Materiel, or TLAMM, here this past year.

Army Reserve Master Sgt. Francisco Llanos, the AR-MEDCOM medical logistics noncommissioned officer in charge, said TLAMM is the primary organization in which the influx and outflow of medical logistics and supplies take place — in order to support AR-MEDCOM and other Army Reserve units, known in military parlance as Compo 3, training exercises and real-world medical missions throughout the Continental United States, or CONUS, and in the U.S. Southern Command theater of operations.

Check out the link below to read more regarding the AR-MEDCOM connection with the TLAMM warehouse in Kelly Field of Port San Antonio, Texas:

https://www.dvidshub.net/news/565818/ar-medcom-tlamm-medical-logistical-relationship-crucial-success

U.S. Army Reserve

20/05/2026

Soldiers assigned to the Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment, Army Reserve Medical Command, participated in rifle and pistol qualification May 14-15, 2026, at Fort Gordon, sharpening marksmanship skills and reinforcing combat readiness.

Capt. Joseph Asselin, the Holistic Health and Fitness system manager of the AR-MEDCOM H2F team, emphasized the importance of mental rehearsal and consistency under pressure, reminding Soldiers that readiness begins long before stepping onto the firing line.

Approximately 70 U.S. Army Reserve Soldiers assigned to the Pinellas Park, Fla., based Army Reserve Medical Command took...
19/05/2026

Approximately 70 U.S. Army Reserve Soldiers assigned to the Pinellas Park, Fla., based Army Reserve Medical Command took part in an Individual Weapons Qualification event in Fort Gordon, Ga., May 14-17, 2026.

Maj. Gen. Beth A. Salisbury, AR-MEDCOM Commanding General, led the in the accomplishment of their training mission — achieving weapons familiarization and qualification on both the M17 Modular Handgun System and the M4 Carbine.

The , and the U.S. Army Reserve in its entirety, organize and engage in weapons qualification tables to maintain their lethality and readiness to not only build and maintain their combat-ready formations, but to be able to expeditiously and efficiently mobilize and deploy to fight and triumph in large-scale combat operations with the latest weaponry, equipment and resources on hand.

U.S. Army Reserve
Fort Gordon

More than 48 Soldiers from 14 units across the Army Reserve Medical Command enterprise recently came together at Camp Pa...
18/05/2026

More than 48 Soldiers from 14 units across the Army Reserve Medical Command enterprise recently came together at Camp Parks, Calif. for a combined Driver’s Training event focused on safety, standardization and readiness, from May 11-15, 2026. Soldiers received classroom instruction, hands-on vehicle training and mentorship designed to strengthen compliant driver training programs and increase the number of qualified military vehicle operators across the force.

This training supports AR-MEDCOM’s commitment to preserving combat power by building safer, more capable formations while also developing the next generation of master drivers and unit-level leaders. By investing in standardized driver education and risk management, the Army Reserve continues to enhance readiness across the medical enterprise and ensure Soldiers remain prepared to operate safely and effectively in any environment.

(Courtesy photos by Maj. Sean Kasica)

Maria Juarez, U.S. Army Reserve Master Sgt. Francisco Llanos Vazquez and USAR Sgt. 1st Class Jeremy Añez Pichardo — resp...
12/05/2026

Maria Juarez, U.S. Army Reserve Master Sgt. Francisco Llanos Vazquez and USAR Sgt. 1st Class Jeremy Añez Pichardo — respectively the senior logistics management specialist, medical logistics noncommissioned officer in charge and strategic MEDLOG fellowship NCO for the Pinellas Park, Fla., based Army Reserve Medical Command — took part in the Calendar Year 2026 Federal Express, or FedEx, Joint Global Logistics Operations Summit, or JGLOS, at the FedEX headquarters in Memphis, Tenn., May 4-8, 2026.

Juarez, Llanos Vazquez and Añez Pichardo accompanied other joint service members and Civilians in the annual workshop to increase their comprehensive aptitude of joint logistics operations and capabilities, ultimately to augment the AR-MEDCOM operational workflow of medical logistics.

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