Title: War, Health, and Medicine
1War, Health, and Medicine
- A Comparison of Heath and Medicine on Several
Fronts 1914-1918
2Casualty retrieval Western Front
3A turning point
- Disease to combat fatality ratios
- Crimean War (all combatants) 51
- American Civil War 51
- South African (British) 21
- World War I (British and Dominion) 0.71
- World War II (British and Dominion) 0.11
4Health in the different theatres
- Percentage of non-battle casualties (deaths and
hospital admissions) - France and Flanders 56 non-battle
- Dardanelles 68 non-battle
- Mesopotamia 91 non-battle
- n.b. 85-90 of all non-battle casualties
typically from disease
5Casualty disposal
- Admissions to hospital and disposal of British
casualties, Western Front 1914-18 - 5,517,455 admitted to hospital
- 183,454 died (wounds and sickness)
- Returned to duty in theatre 2,981,232 (54)
- Evacuated overseas 2,279,695
6Casualty Clearing Station
7Key factors
- 1. Geographical climate, terrain, disease
ecology - 2. Operational mobility, complexity (LofC)
- 3. Morale and discipline of troops
- 4. External scrutiny and assistance
- 5. Resources
- 6. Relations between MOs and other officers
81.i Anti-typhoid inoculation
91.ii Geographical factors levelling effects of
technology? (typhoid)
Theatre Year Incidence per 1,000 Deaths per 1,000
France 1914
1915 4.0 0.22
1916 2.0 0.02
1917 0.61 0.012
1918 0.12 0.007
Mesopot. 1916
1917 14.4 1.08
1918 6.0 0.55
101.iii Louse-borne diseases
111.iv Malaria
121.v Evacuation over harsh terrain - Gallipoli
131.v How much did geography matter?
- Each theatre presented with unique challenges
- But, on balance, greater difficulties faced
outside Western Europe - Levelling effects of medical technology limited
largely to typhoid
142.i Operational factors
- 1. Advantages of static warfare on the Western
Front - 2. Infrastructure
- 3. Difficulties of combined operations
- 4. Extended lines of communication
- 5. Operationally-generated medical problems
e.g. shellshock, gas poisoning and asphyxia,
trench diseases - 6. Enemy attack/interdiction
152.ii Lines of evacuation
162.iii Sinking of H.S. Anglia
172.iv Shell-shock
183.i Ottoman army
193.ii Hospital transports - Dardanelles
204.i Scrutiny
- War reporting less important than other factors
(precedent of SA War) - Return of casualties to home countries
- Visits by dignitaries and politicians
- Presence of civilian volunteers
- High command and government acutely conscious of
need to keep up public morale imperial political
dimensions
214.ii Sir John Frenchs sister - VAD
225.i Relations between COs and MOs
- Professionalization in C19th
- Foundation of RAMC 1898
- South African War
- Post-war reforms and R-J War
- Training of COs
- Volunteers/conscripts
235.ii Arthur Sloggett Alfred Keogh
245.iii Hamilton and Birdwood at Gallipoli
255.iv COs and MOs Mesopotamia
- Exclusion of MOs from Nixons HQ little though
given to logistical aspects or sanitation - Culture of Indian Army deference of MOs
- Temporary MOs change culture Horsley
- Change of command
- Massive improvement in sickness rates, evacuation
and treatment
265.v Non-battle casualties in Mesopotamia
(British)
- 1914-15 10,518 (1,297 per 1,000)
- 1916 75,111 (1,558 per 1,000)
- 1917 114,412 (1,364 per 1,000)
- 1918 98,733 (919 per 1,000)
- Total British 298,774 (90.5)
- Comparison total Indian 521,644 (91)
275.vi Palestine
28Conclusions
- 1. Differences between theatres not simply due to
geographical/operational factors - 2. Sanitary and medical conditions were improved,
even in unpromising conditions - 3. Main reasons for this were external scrutiny
better resources better CO-MO relationships - 4. Manpower economy a strong stimulus to good
medical arrangements - 5. But morale of troops and families equally
important hence importance of external scrutiny - 6. Medical and sanitary advances in advanced
nations diminished fatalism, while
democratization and class politics increased
political stakes