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  2. Battlefield medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battlefield_medicine

    Battlefield medicine, also called field surgery and later combat casualty care, is the treatment of wounded combatants and non-combatants in or near an area of combat. Civilian medicine has been greatly advanced by procedures that were first developed to treat the wounds inflicted during combat.

  3. Military medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_medicine

    Military medical personnel engage in humanitarian work and are "protected persons" under international humanitarian law in accordance with the First and Second Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols, which established legally binding rules guaranteeing neutrality and protection for wounded soldiers, field or ship's medical personnel, and specific humanitarian institutions in an ...

  4. Lawrence Bruce Robertson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Bruce_Robertson

    [4] [5] In 1916 he wrote an article for the British Medical Journal detailing his results, titled "The Transfusion of Whole Blood: A Suggestion for More Frequent Employment in War Surgery". [6] This, along with improvements in the process developed by British physician Edward William Archibald , persuaded the British authorities to accept the ...

  5. Jonathan Letterman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Letterman

    Major Jonathan Letterman (December 11, 1824 – March 15, 1872) was an American surgeon credited as being the originator of the modern methods for medical organization in armies or battlefield medical management. In the United States, Letterman is known today as the "Father of Battlefield Medicine".

  6. Tactical emergency medical services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tactical_emergency_medical...

    Tactical medicine has its origins on the battlefield. Since human beings have been fighting in wars, tactical medicine has been applied to those wounded in combat. [ 3 ] Early kings had personal medics to care for them in the event that they were injured in battle, while the Spartans utilized persons from lower ranking classes, Helots , to tend ...

  7. Medicine in the American Civil War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicine_in_the_American...

    The most common battlefield operation was amputation. If a soldier was badly wounded in the arm or leg, amputation was usually the only solution. [citation needed] About 75% of amputees survived the operation. [citation needed] A 2016 research paper found that Civil War surgery was effective at improving patient health outcomes. [54]

  8. Friedrich von Esmarch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_von_Esmarch

    The latter is the substance of a course of lectures delivered by him in 1881 to a Samaritan School, the first of the kind in Germany, founded by Esmarch in 1881, in imitation of the St John Ambulance classes which had been organized in England in 1878. These lectures were very generally adopted as a manual for first aid students, edition after ...

  9. War Surgery in Afghanistan and Iraq: A Series of Cases, 2003 ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_Surgery_in_Afghanistan...

    By August 2008, it had reached the number 67 position among bestselling books and was the top selling book on surgery at Amazon.com. [2] Cases of war trauma from Afghanistan and Iraq are presented, the forward management of which was outlined in the handbook "Emergency War Surgery, Third United States Revision" (2004) and with which this ...