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Past to Present


Vik Bebarta, MD, is chair of the CU Anschutz Department of Emergency Medicine and spent 14 years on active duty as a U.S. Air Force combat physician. As founding director, he talks about CU’s Center for Combat Medicine and Battlefield Research's beginning and mission.

May 2026

By Mark Harden 

1997 last of fitz - key handed over by military

Throughout history, many key advances of emergency medicine have happened on the battlefield – new ways to transport wounded soldiers and triage patients in the Civil War, blood transfusion in World War I, air evacuation and widespread antibiotic use in World War II, and much more. 

Today, the Center for Combat Medicine and Battlefield (COMBAT) Research at the University of Colorado Anschutz applies multidisciplinary scientific capabilities to solving the toughest medical challenges facing U.S. combat forces, and translates that research to improve health care at home.

Launched in 2019, the center draws on the work of more than 100 investigators and dozens of government, academic, and industry partners. And that work happens on a campus that, for almost a century, was a military facility caring for those who fought in the nation’s wars. 

To learn more about the origins of the Center for COMBAT Research, we turned to its founding director, Vik Bebarta, MD, who is also chair of the CU Anschutz Department of Emergency Medicine and a noted researcher. Bebarta served 14 years on active duty as a U.S. Air Force combat physician, with multiple deployments, and is a colonel in Air Force Reserve. 

How did the center for COMBAT Research come about? 

When I was on active duty, I saw how fast the battlefield was changing – new threats, new technologies, new injury patterns. As a research leader in the military, I found that the U.S. Department of Defense was not always getting the best solutions for battlefield issues like traumatic brain injury, suicide, blood transfusion, burns, and more. We needed to close those gaps, but our academic research partners just weren't moving at the same speed.  

When I came to CU Anschutz 10 years ago, I realized we have remarkable talent here, in a state with a military focus, and the gaps in the military’s research needs could be easily filled by our people here. So we decided to build a bridge between civilian researchers and the military to close those gaps. We took the scientific depth of this top-tier medical campus and aligned it with the real-world needs of the military health system. 

What did COMBAT center look like at the beginning? 

It was a grassroots program that started from the bottom up. Co-founder Kathleen Flarity, DNP, PhD, and I launched the center with 1.2 FTEs and just a couple of investigators, but the Department of Defense was wildly impressed. Our folks were coming to the table to say, “What problem do you need us to solve?” We went after each problem and solved it.  

We built the center to close the gap between the speed of war and speed of academia, and not just studying problems in theory, but problems that show up in a helicopter at 2 a.m.  

Basically, we met our three-year goals in three months, and continued to grow. In the military community, we went from unheard of to the leader in the field of military casualty-care research. We focus on building trust that we will deliver on time, and we want to move fast – rigorously, but with urgency. 

Given your background caring for service members in war zones, what does the center mean for you at a personal level? 

Service members are sacrificing for our country, and they deserve the best science we can deliver, coming from people at CU who care about that work. That’s the personal component to it for me. 

You speak often about the spirit of collaboration at CU Anschutz. How important is that spirit to the COMBAT center’s work?  

It’s very important, because we can leverage all the capabilities on this campus to solve these problems – and not just at this campus, but at CU Boulder and elsewhere. A problem might need a bioengineer, an orthopedics PhD, a wound-care infection specialist, a hospitalist, and an emergency physician to come together to find a solution. Collaborators are a force multiplier here. 

The COMBAT center is based on a campus with a rich history as a military medical center, and a major veterans administration hospital is next Door. How meaningful is that background to the center’s mission? 

The spirit of military medicine and veteran care has always been here. History has shaped the culture here. It’s a legacy of readiness and service. But we’re not operating in the past. We’re operating something that’s modern and nationally relevant. The throughline from Fitzsimons to COMBAT is a focus on service, readiness, and impact.

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