The newly upgraded National Defense Medical University (NDMU) should enhance its battlefield trauma care training, President William Lai (賴清德) said yesterday at a ceremony marking the institution’s elevation from the National Defense Medical Center.
Greater global exchanges would help the new university specialize in battlefield medicine and trauma care, Lai said.
Cooperation with international partners would allow it to learn from other countries’ military and medical education systems, and apply the lessons to support the armed forces and bolster society’s broader capacity to respond to crises, he said.
Photo: Chang Chia-ming, Taipei Times
The university is a crucial asset for infectious disease research and prevention, he said, citing its status as Taiwan’s only institution with a biosafety level-4 laboratory.
The institution is uniquely positioned to be tasked with military duties and medical responsibility, Lai said, adding that it must continue to train medical professionals who can serve beyond the military system.
Tri-Service General Hospital in Taipei’s Neihu District (內湖), the university’s teaching hospital, “was established not only to serve military personnel, but also to safeguard the health of all citizens,” he said.
Photo: CNA
NDMU was officially upgraded on Aug. 1.
The upgrade is intended to boost its competitiveness, faculty training and research so it can better support Taiwan’s military medical development and defense readiness, the Ministry of National Defense said.
‘ANGRY’: Forgetting the humiliations and sacrifices of ‘the people of the Republic of China’ experienced disqualified Lai from being president, Ma Ying-jeou said Former president Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) yesterday criticized President William Lai (賴清德) over what he called “phrasing that downplayed Japan’s atrocities” against China during World War II. Ma made the remarks in a post on Facebook on the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II. Ma said he was “angry and disappointed” that Lai described the anniversary as the end of World War II instead of a “victory in the war of resistance” — a reference to the end of the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945). The eight-year war was a part of World War II, in which Japan and the other Axis
The Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) yesterday announced a ban on all current and former government officials from traveling to China to attend a military parade on Sept. 3, which Beijing is to hold to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second Sino-Japanese War. "This year marks the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II and the Republic of China’s victory in the War of Resistance [Against Japan]," MAC Deputy Minister and spokesperson Liang Wen-chieh (梁文傑) told a regular news briefing in Taipei. To prevent Beijing from using the Sept. 3 military parade and related events for "united
‘OFFSHORE OPERATIONS’: Also in Dallas, Texas, the Ministry of Economic Affairs inaugurated its third Taiwan Trade and Investment Center to foster closer cooperation The 2025 Taiwan Expo USA opened on Thursday in Dallas, Texas, featuring 150 Taiwanese companies showcasing their latest technologies in the fields of drones, smart manufacturing and healthcare. The Taiwan External Trade Development Council (TAITRA), the event’s organizer, said the exhibitors this year include Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (Foxconn), the world’s largest contract electronics manufacturer; AUO; PC brand Asustek Computer; and drone maker Thunder Tiger. In his opening speech, TAITRA chairman James Huang (黃志芳) said he expected Texas to become a world-class center for innovation and manufacturing as US technology companies from Silicon Valley and Taiwanese manufacturers form an industrial cluster
A 20-year-old man yesterday evening was electrocuted and fell to his death after he climbed a seven-story-high electricity tower to photograph the sunset, causing a wildfire on Datong Mountain (大同山) in New Taipei City’s Shulin District (樹林), the Taoyuan Police Department said today. The man, surnamed Hsieh (謝), was accompanied on an evening walk by a 20-year-old woman surnamed Shang (尚) who remained on the ground and witnessed the incident, capturing a final photograph of her friend sitting atop the tower before his death, an initial investigation showed. Shang then sought higher ground to call for help, police said. The New Taipei