US medics administer plasma to a patient in a jeep ambulance Italy 1944 (US Army Medical Dept.) |
A furrow raced up Lucia's forehead, and she clutched her doll even tighter.
Time for Hutch's treat. "I have a gift for you. For Lucia." (On Distant Shores, p. 194)
In my new novel On Distant Shores, the hero serves as a pharmacist in an evacuation hospital and the heroine serves as a flight nurse. To celebrate the book’s release, I’m running a series on hospitalization in World War II. Earlier I discussed the chain of evacuation, then I discussed mobile and fixed hospitals in more detail, and today I’ll cover evacuation of the wounded.
Manual Transport
On the battleground, medics or fellow soldiers could manually carry a wounded man further to the rear for aid. Methods included the supporting carry (walking side-by-side), the arms carry, the saddleback carry (piggy-back), and the fireman’s carry.
Litter-bearers in Italy's mountains |
American litters were made of canvas stretched over aluminum or wood poles with stirrup-shaped feet to keep them off the ground. A litter could be carried by two people, but a litter squad consisted of four men, to rotate if traveling long distances and to assist over obstacles. Ideally, litter transport was only used for short distances, but in mountainous or forested or swampy terrain, litter transport was the only available means. Mules were often used in the Mediterranean Theater to carry litters in rocky, mountainous terrain.
Dodge WC9 1/2 ton ambulance, 15 May 1941 (US National Archives) |
Ambulances were used to transport patients, usually from an aid, clearing, or collecting station to a field hospital, or for transport further to the rear. Ambulances could carry seven seated patients or four patients on litters.
Jeeps were often used, both on the battleground and to transport further to the rear. Rugged and maneuverable, jeeps could cover terrain inaccessible to ambulances. With litter brackets, a jeep could carry two or three patients. Armored divisions also used light tanks to transport their wounded.
Wounded American soldiers being evacuated by landing craft (LCVP) off Salerno, Italy, 9 September 1943. (US Army Medical Dept.) |
During an amphibious landing, the best way to handle the wounded was to send them back on departing landing craft, which carried them to hospital ships off-shore. Patients could be removed from danger and transported quickly to get needed care.
Hospital ship USS Tranquillity arriving at Guam with survivors of sinking of USS Indianapolis, 8 Aug 1945. (US National Archives) |
US 41st Hospital Train running from the Italian front to the Army hospital complex in Naples, February 1944 (US Army Medical Dept.) |
Hospital trains were used within theaters of operation to transport patients from one hospital to another. They were used in the continental US, Britain, continental Europe, India, and North Africa. They could carry several hundred patients with excellent medical care.
Air Evacuation from Italy to North Africa in a C-47 (US Army Medical Dept.) |
Medical air evacuation was new and revolutionary, but by the end of the war, it proved successful. Planes can traverse inhospitable terrain or dangerous seas—and quickly. C-47 cargo planes carried 18-24 litter patients or a higher number of ambulatory patients. A team consisting of a flight nurse and a surgical technician cared for the patients in flight. The larger C-54 cargo plane was used for trans-oceanic evacuation. Danger still existed, both from the inherent risks of flight and also because the planes carried cargo, couldn’t be marked with the Red Cross, and were legitimate military targets.
For more on air evacuation in World War II, please see my posts on air evacuation, one patient's flight experience, and flight nursing.
Resources
Office of the Surgeon General. Medical Field Manual: Transportation of the Sick and Wounded. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, Feb. 21, 1941 (http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/ref/FM/index.html ). Please note the date—some of the material, especially about air evacuation, became quickly outdated.
For better information on air evacuation, please see:
Links, Mae Mills & Coleman, Hubert A. Medical Support of the Army Air Forces in World War II. Washington, D.C.: Office of the Surgeon General, USAF, 1955.
Thanks, Sarah. This proved to be very timely for me!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Terri! I'm glad you found it helpful!
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