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Military department

Military department

The Military Department of the National Center for Infectious Diseases (NCID) under the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Armenia provides medical services to conscripted soldiers, officers, military pensioners, personnel of other security structures, and individuals equated with servicemen (such as participants of military operations, members of the Yerkrapah Volunteer Union, etc.).

Since 1998, military servicemen had been treated in the Adult Infectious Diseases Department. Subsequently, a separate Military Department operated for many years until 2020. Thereafter, it functioned as a subunit within the Adult Infectious Diseases Department, and in October 2022, it was reopened as an independent department within the NCID.

The department, with a capacity of 37 beds, is equipped with all necessary medical devices, isolation wards, and supplies. It provides both outpatient and inpatient care for patients with acute and chronic infectious diseases in accordance with international standards.

Patients in the Military Department receive treatment for a wide range of infections, including:

  • Scarlet fever
     
  • Erysipelas
     
  • Brucellosis
     
  • Leishmaniasis
     
  • Hepatitis
     
  • HIV and other co-infections
     
  • Intestinal infections such as salmonellosis, dysentery, E. coli, shigellosis, typhoid and paratyphoid fever
     
  • Infections of undetermined etiology
     
  • Other types of infectious diseases
     

The department’s staff includes both highly experienced specialists and younger physicians who continuously enhance their professional knowledge and skills through regular training programs, experience-sharing initiatives, and workshops—aimed at providing patients with the most effective and high-quality medical care possible.

The Military Department of the National Center for Infectious Diseases (NCID) under the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Armenia provides medical services to conscripted soldiers, officers, military pensioners, personnel of other security structures, and individuals equated with servicemen (such as participants of military operations, members of the Yerkrapah Volunteer Union, etc.).

Since 1998, military servicemen had been treated in the Adult Infectious Diseases Department. Subsequently, a separate Military Department operated for many years until 2020. Thereafter, it functioned as a subunit within the Adult Infectious Diseases Department, and in October 2022, it was reopened as an independent department within the NCID.

The department, with a capacity of 37 beds, is equipped with all necessary medical devices, isolation wards, and supplies. It provides both outpatient and inpatient care for patients with acute and chronic infectious diseases in accordance with international standards.

Patients in the Military Department receive treatment for a wide range of infections, including:

  • Scarlet fever
     
  • Erysipelas
     
  • Brucellosis
     
  • Leishmaniasis
     
  • Hepatitis
     
  • HIV and other co-infections
     
  • Intestinal infections such as salmonellosis, dysentery, E. coli, shigellosis, typhoid and paratyphoid fever
     
  • Infections of undetermined etiology
     
  • Other types of infectious diseases
     

The department’s staff includes both highly experienced specialists and younger physicians who continuously enhance their professional knowledge and skills through regular training programs, experience-sharing initiatives, and workshops—aimed at providing patients with the most effective and high-quality medical care possible.