Origins of the Armed Forces Medical Examiner System
Author(s) -
Victor W. Weedn
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
academic forensic pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1925-3621
DOI - 10.1177/1925362120937916
Subject(s) - surgeon general , medical examiner , forensic pathology , spanish civil war , government (linguistics) , library science , military medicine , medicine , law , political science , public health , pathology , poison control , medical emergency , autopsy , suicide prevention , linguistics , philosophy , computer science
The Armed Forces Medical Examiner System (AFMES) is the only medicolegal death investigation system of the US federal government. Its origins can be traced to three dried tissue specimens placed on a shelf by a Civil War Surgeon General in 1862. The collections and the library of the Army Surgeon General spawned the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP), the National Museum of Health and Medicine, the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, and the National Library of Medicine. Pathologists of the Army Medical Museum performed the autopsies of assassinated Presidents Lincoln and Garfield and assisted with that of Kennedy. The now defunct AFIP created the first forensic pathology training program approved by the American Board of Pathology and then the AFMES. Col Ed Johnston, CAPT Charlie Stahl, and Col Dick Froede were the original pioneers of the AFMES.
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