Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine


Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine is a tri-service military medicine center in the Swedish Armed Forces. Its staff is made up of officers, civilian specialists, group commanders and officer reservists – tasked with ensuring care is provided during peacetime, on international missions, at times of crisis and in combat.

History

The Swedish Armed Forces Center for Defense Medicine has its roots in the Medical Board of the Royal Swedish Army Materiel Administration, which was established in 1906. On 1 January 1944, the Medical Services Administration of the Swedish Armed Forces was established. The Medical Services Administration of the Swedish Armed Forces took over tasks that had previously been entrusted to the Royal Swedish Army Materiel Administration, the Royal Swedish Naval Materiel Administration and the Royal Swedish Air Force Materiel Administration. The tasks of the Medical Services Administration of the Swedish Armed Forces were to exercise, in technical and economic terms, the management and oversight of the Swedish Armed Forces's health care. More elaborate were the activities of the Medical Services Administration, military hospitals, health care services, the medical equipment, the medical supplies and medicines, funds management, administrative matters in general, remittance cases from the King in Council or head of ministry and assistant to the Supreme Commander, the chiefs of the Army, Navy and Air Force, etc. in health care issues. The inspection activities within the Army, Navy and Air Force medical services were the respnsibility of the Chief Army Medical Officer , the Chief Naval Medical Officer and the Chief Air Force Medical Officer.
On 1 July 1949, the unit was renamed the Medical Board of the Swedish Armed Forces. The name change was not prompted by a changed organization. The Medical Board of the Swedish Armed Forces exercised the management and supervision of the health care within the Swedish Armed Forces. Within the board, a medical corps office was established and for this reason, the SFS 1969:409 instruction from 1 July 1969 meant that the Swedish Army Medical Corps, the Swedish Naval Medical Officers’ Corps and the Swedish Army Veterinary Corps was now referred to as the Medical Corps of the Swedish Armed Forces. From 1 January 1974, there were pharmaceutical expertise on the board which was directly subordinate to the Surgeon-General of the Swedish Armed Forces, when the same SFS 1973:953 instruction for military pharmacies expired. The Medical Board of the Swedish Armed Forces ceased on 30 June 1994. Large parts of the operations were transferred on 1 July of that year to the newly formed Medical Center of the Swedish Armed Forces in Hammarö, Karlstad.
Prior to the Defence Act of 2004, the Swedish government proposed to the Riksdag that the Medical Center of the Swedish Armed Forces should be relocated from Hammarö to Gothenburg. The background was that the Artillery Regiment in Kristinehamn was proposed to be relocated to Boden Garrison. Hence, the Medical Center of the Swedish Armed Forces would become a solitaire in Värmland, something the government felt would increase the Swedish Armed Forces' long-term overall operations. In the government's proposal, a disbandment of the 4th Marine Regiment was proposed, which would allow the Medical Center of the Swedish Armed Forces to utilize the liberated educational capacity in Gothenburg. The fact that Gothenburg was proposed as a new location was also partly due to an inquiry on the Command and Government Organization for the Swedish Armed Forces. The inquiry had, among other things, looked at the Swedish Armed Forces' health and medical care. The arguments put forward at that time the government considered largely valid. Among other things, the argument put forward by the inquiry in 1992 that the operations could be conducted in all the three localities in question, ie Gothenburg, Solna and Karlstad.
From 1 September 2005, the Swedish Armed Forces Medical Center began operating in Gothenburg. Remaining in Hammarö was a decommissioning organization, which operated there until 31 December 2005. From 1 January 2006, the entire center operated in Gothenburg, at the same time the Elfsborg Group was added as part of the Swedish Armed Forces Medical Center. This was when the Southern Military District was disbanded on 31 December 2005. As a further cost-cutting and coordination, in June 2006, the Swedish Armed Forces proposed that the Swedish Armed Forces Medical Center should be reorganized as the Swedish Air Force Centre for Aviation Medicine and the Swedish Armed Forces Diving and Naval Medicine Centre be amalgamated into the Swedish Armed Forces Medical Center. The new organization would apply from 1 January 2007, and at the same time, the Swedish Armed Forces Medical Center adopted the name wedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine.
On 1 January 2013, four military regions were formed, in which the Western Military Region was subordinate to the commander of the Skaraborg Regiment, but reported to the Chief of Joint Operations in the Swedish Armed Forces Headquarters regarding territorial command in peace, crisis and war. However, the commander of the Elfsborg Group was still subordinate to the head of the Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine regarding production management of Home Guard units as well as operational command in the geographical area of the training groups. However, on 1 January 2018, the command of Skaraborg Regiment and the Western Military Region was divided, by appointing a separate executive position for the Western Military Region. In addition, the staff of the Western Military Region was directly assigned to the Chief of Joint Operations in the Swedish Armed Forces Headquarters in command issues. In the Swedish Armed Forces' budget for the 2020 government, it was proposed that the four military regional staffs should be set up as their own organizational units from 1 January 2020. The commanders of the military regional staffs were in turn proposed to be subjected to the Chief of Home Guard regarding the production of training groups and Home Guard units. This meant that the training groups were transferred organizationally from a training unit to the four military regional staffs. In the government's proposition, however, the government emphasized that the military regional division could be adjusted, depending on the outcome of the inquiry "Responsibility, leadership and coordination in civil defense". For the Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine, this change meant that the Elfsborg Group was transferred to the Western Military Region from 1 January 2020.

Units

Current units

Barracks

Until 1976, the Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine and its predecessors were located in Stockholm Garrison. From 1976, the Medical Board of the Swedish Armed Forces moved to Karlstad, and was located at the Karolinen property complex in central Karlstad. In connection with the reorganization of the Medical Board of the Swedish Armed Forces and renaming it to the Medical Center of the Swedish Armed Forces, the center was moved to Sätterstrand in Hammarö Municipality. Sätterstrand had been a nursing home since the 1960s. In Hammarö, the center consisted of about 20 buildings. After the Swedish Armed Forces left the area in Hammarö, the area has been developed into a business park with a focus on business development.
When the center was relocated to Gothenburg, it took over the barracks erected in Västra Frölunda in 1942 for the Älvsborg Coastal Artillery Regiment, later used by the 4th Marine Regiment. After the 4th Marine Regiment was disbanded through the Defence Act of 2004, the Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine took over the barracks.

Detachment

The Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine has since 1 January 2007 a detachment in Linköping. This was after the Swedish Air Force Centre for Aviation Medicine was disbanded, and its operations were organized into the Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine.

Training areas

The Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine manages two training areas in the Gothenburg region. However, Sisjön Training Area is managed by Skaraborg Regiment. On 5 September 2019, the commander of the Naval Base, Commander Håkan Nilsson handed over the management responsibility for two training areas and the garrison responsibility for the Gullmars Base to the head of the Swedish Armed Forces Centre for Defence Medicine, Colonel Peter Fredriksson. The background and reason was that the nearest unit should be responsible for training areas and have garrison responsibility for units in the geographical area.

Heraldry and traditions

Coat of arms

A coat of arms was used by the Medical Board of the Armed Forces and Surgeon-General of the Swedish Armed Forces from 1943 to 1994. Blazon: "Azure, the Swedish minor-coat-of-arms, three open crowns or placed two and one. The shield surmounting a sword bendwise and a rod of Asclepius bendwise sinister in saltire, all or." Another coat of arms was used by the Medical Center of the Swedish Armed Forces from 1994. Blazon: "Gules, a sword and a rod of Asclepius in saltire, all or. The shield surmounting an erect sword orf the last colour".

Colours, standards and guidons

The units colour comes in the form of a double swallow-tailed Swedish flag which was presented to FSC in Hammarö by the Supreme Commander, General Johan Hederstedt on 6 June 2002.

Traditions

The unit retains the traditional heritage primarily from Älvsborg Regiment, the Swedish Armed Forces Medical Center and the Swedish Air Force Centre for Aviation Medicine, and secondarily from the Swedish Armed Forces Medical College.

Commanding officers

Until 30 June 1994, the Surgeon-General of the Swedish Armed Forces was also the head of the Medical Corps of the Swedish Armed Forces and head of the Medical Board of the Swedish Armed Forces.
  • 1944-01-01 – 1952-10-01: David Lindsjö
  • 1952–1964: Carl Erik Groth
  • 1964–1974: Carl-Johan Clemedson
  • 1975–1981: Åke Lindgren
  • 1979–1980: Bo Rybeck
  • 1981–1985: Bo Rybeck
  • 1985–1994: Rear Admiral Björn Zetterström
  • 1994-07-01 – 1999-04-30: Commander Tomas Wilén
  • 1999-05-01 – 2001-06-30: Colonel Tommy W. Johansson
  • 2001-07-01 – 2005-05-31: Colonel Eskil Dalenius
  • 2005-06-01 – 2006-12-31: Colonel Bo Andersson
  • 2007 – 2010-12-31: Commander Lennart Bengtsson
  • 2011-01-01 – 2011-03-31: Colonel Leif Härdig
  • 2011-04-01 – 2014-05-28: Colonel Mikael Åkerström
  • 2014-05-28 – 2014-09-30: Colonel Leif Härdig
  • 2014-10-01 – 2018-09-30: Colonel Peter Adolfsson
  • 2018-09-01 – 2022-08-31: Colonel Peter Fredriksson

    Names, designations and locations

Footnotes

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