Page 51 - Year 10 Knowledge Organiser
P. 51

History: Medicine Through Time (British Sector of the Western Front): 5 of 5                                  Hospitality & Catering: 1 of 7


 The Battles  Illness & Injury  Doctors and nurses

 Ypres – Called ‘Wipers’ by the British. Most direct route   RAMC: Royal Army Medical Corps. All medical
 to Calais/Dunkirk. Ypres Salient (‘bulge’) was vulnerable   staff belonged from doctors to ambulance
 as Germanscould fire down on it. Became  drivers.9000 staff in 1914, increased to 113,000
 waterlogged. Second Battle saw the first use of gas.
 by 1918.
 Somme– Huge casualty rate: over 60,000 on day one.   VAD: Volunteer Aid Detachment. Middle &
 By the end of the battle, over 400,000 Allied causalities   upper class women who did a lot of cleaning.
 and 450,000 Germans.Casualties overwhelmedthe   By 1917 they had more medical duties like
 medics.  nursing and dressing wounds.
 Arras – Soldiers from New Zealand had dug tunnels in   FANY: First Aid Nursing Yeomanry. Founded in
 the chalky ground. These rooms were fitted with   1907 by a soldier who wanted women riding in
 electricity and running water. The hospital had over   to help wounded soldiers. Many were
 700 beds. It also allowed secrecy and shelter.  ambulance drivers& nurses.
 Cambrai – This battle saw the first large-scale use of
 tanks (over 450). No preliminarybombardment so it   Medicinein the War
 was a surprise. Not backed up by the infantry so
 eventually they lost ground  Aseptic Surgery- Moving to remove bacteria from the
 theatre, altogether,
 In WWI: Hygiene in surgery is poor. To combat problems of
 infection the Carrel-Dakin method was introduced: The
 The Trench system  EvacuationRoute  wound was continually flushed with chemicals to stop
 infection & often made deeper to remove affected tissue.
 X-rays: Rontgen discovered xrays in 1895. This helped with
 1. Stretcher bearers  identifying shrapnel in wounds during WWI.
 In WWI: Mobile x-rays were introduced. Initially there
 2. Regimental Aid Posts  were only 2 but sppn every CCS & hospital had one.
 Blood Groups:- Karl Landsteiner discovered blood groups.
 3. Dressing stations   Transfusions were possible as long as donor & patient
 were in the same room.
 In WWI: Storing blood was problematic. It was discovered
 4. Casualty Clearing Stations  that if sodium citrate was added & it was chilled, it would
 last longer. Mobile blood banks were also introduced.
 5. Base hospitals  The Thomas Splint: 80% of men who had been shot in the
 femur died. The two sharp ends of broken bone caused
 more blood loss. The Thomas Splint pulled the bones apart
 to stop them grinding on the flesh. The death rate reduced
 from 80% to 20%. People were trained to use it in R.A.P.s.
   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56