News

LANDSTUHL, Germany -- Medical-surgical teams at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center here save the lives every day of warriors wounded in Afghanistan and, until recently, saved troops wounded in Iraq.
1 / 4 Show Caption + Hide Caption – U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class Levon Locken, Landstuhl Regional Medical Center medical lab technician, carries a box of replicated blood products as part of ...
LANDSTUHL, Germany — Although it has been seeing patients for more than a year, Landstuhl Regional Medical Center’s Women’s Care Center will hold its grand opening and open house Monday. The ...
LANDSTUHL, Germany — Landstuhl Regional Medical Center teamed up with German doctors and medics for a mass-casualty response drill Thursday that stemmed from a mutually expressed need to work ...
Landstuhl hospital commander suspended pending an investigation The inquiry into Landstuhl Regional Medical Center commander Col. Timothy Hudson does not involve patient safety or care, officials say.
Landstuhl Regional Medical Center recognized the crucial contributions of medical professionals during National Nurses Week from May 6-12, 2022. (Marcy Sanchez/Army) ...
The Landstuhl Regional Medical Center (LRMC) is an overseas military hospital operated by the United States Army and the Department of Defense. LRMC is the largest military hospital outside of the ...
The Army’s Landstuhl Regional Medical Center has quietly started admitting Ukrainian Army soldiers who were wounded in combat, most of them American volunteers. By Dave Philipps and Eric Schmitt ...
Landstuhl Regional Medical Center boasts a unique combination of cutting-edge advances in battlefield medicine and hard-won experience in treating serious trauma.
High levels of Legionella bacteria force two areas of Landstuhl Regional Medical Center to close down for decontamination. (Centers for Disease Control) Editor’s note: This story has been ...
The 1950s-era Landstuhl Regional Medical Center is renowned for being the first stop for service members wounded in Europe, the Middle East and elsewhere.
A North Carolina congressman and two others traveled Monday to the medical center in Germany where three Americans, released by Iran as part of a prisoner swap, are being treated.