A wounded man of the 3rd
Canadian Infantry Division
receives first aid from
members of the Regimental
Aid Post, with help from
the regiment's Padre,
near Caen, Normandy, 15
July 1944.
|
| Photo
by Harold G. Aikman. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-133244. |
 |
| A
wounded man of the 3rd Canadian
Infantry Division is evacuated
by members of the Regimental
Aid Post, with help from
the regiment's Padre, near
Caen, Normandy, 15 July
1944. |
| Photo
by Harold G. Aikman. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-140192. |
|
In addition to civilian practice
and research, doctors and other medical
practitioners were needed in the Army.
By the end of the European war, 34,786
personnel had served in the Royal
Canadian Army Medical Corps (RCAMC),
including 3656 nursing sisters, and
the Corps suffered 107 fatal battle
casualties.
In choosing to enlist, medical personnel
were subject to the sort of regimentation
one would expect from the army. The
Field Ambulance was the organization
responsible for evacuation and treatment
of casualties forward of the Casualty
Clearing Station (CCS). Field Ambulance
units were assigned to support specific
brigades, for example No. 14 Canadian
Field Ambulance worked with 7th Canadian
Infantry Brigade, No. 22 with 8th
Brigade, and No. 23 treated 9th Brigade's
casualties. Assault sections of these
three Field Ambulance units landed
with the infantry on D-Day. From the
battlefield, a wounded soldier was
moved by stretcher-bearers to his
unit's Regimental Aid Post, from which
he was evacuated by ambulance. The
RAP was set up in haste to deal with
the wounded as quickly as possible,
so only very basic treatment was available.
It was sometimes bypassed and a casualty
taken directly to a Casualty Clearing
Post, where he might receive blood
products or morphine. The entire chain
of evacuation to this point was within
range of enemy fire, so removal of
casualties further to the rear as
quickly as possible was obviously
of extreme importance. The next step
was evacuation to a Field Dressing
Station, where intermediate treatment
could be offered before transfer to
a Casualty Clearing Station, a basic
hospital for surgery and short-term
convalescence.
This system was modified in Northwest
Europe. In order to get the wounded
into surgery faster, Field Dressing
Stations (FDSs) came to be combined
with Field Transfusion Units (FTUs)
and Field Surgical Units (FSUs) to
form Advanced Surgical Centres (ASCs).
The Casualty Clearing Station-which
otherwise performed surgery-was not
considered suitable as a basis for
the ASC because it had insufficient
personnel to adequately support two
FSUs (each of two surgical teams).
The ASC operated closer to the front
while the CCS came to be responsible
more for convalescence further back.
Nursing
Sister D. Mick reading
patient's chart during
rounds of a ward at No.
15 Canadian General Hospital,
R.C.A.M.C., El Arrouch,
Algeria, August 1943.
During the Sicilian campaign,
wounded men were evacuated
to Algeria for treatment.
|
| Photo
by Frederick G. Whitcombe.
Department of National Defence
/ National Archives of Canada,
PA-141498 |
Private
F. Madore has dressings
checked by nursing sister
M.F. Giles at R.C.A.F. Airport
in France, 16 June 1944.
Close to the front, nursing
sisters were a comforting
presence as they cared for
the wounded men. |
| Photo
by Ken Bell. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-131427. |
|
Treatment of the wounded in forward
areas was the responsibility of male
medical personnel, but the contribution
of nursing sisters to post-operative
care of wounded soldiers cannot be
understated. Nursing sisters were
usually attached to a General Hospital
or CCS, but arguments were made for
their employment further forward with
FSUs because their role in monitoring
patients following surgery not only
aided recovery, it also made the surgeon's
job easier.
The final step in the evacuation
chain was transfer to a General Hospital
for cases requiring further care.
In the early stages of the Normandy
campaign this was done primarily by
ship to England, although air evacuation
of casualties had also been done since
the Sicilian campaign in 1943. There
were more than 20 Canadian General
Hospitals, most of which were attached
to army formations and thus moved
to follow the army's advance. No.
1 Canadian General Hospital, for example,
opened in early 1941 near Birmingham
with 600 beds but moved, beginning
in December 1943, to various locations
in Italy to support 1st Canadian Corps.
It was ultimately joined in the Mediterranean
by Numbers 3, 5, 14, 15, and 28 Canadian
General Hospitals. Meanwhile, in the
UK, preparations for the invasion
of Northwest Europe led to the designation
of groups of transit, coastal, and
base hospitals. Transit hospitals
received casualties brought by train
from south coast ports, while coastal
hospitals took casualties transported
in vessels not part of the regular
evacuation chain. After treatment
at these centres, patients would be
transferred to base hospitals. By
July 1944, a number of Canadian General
Hospitals were concentrated at Bayeux,
Normandy as part of the 21st Army
Group medical centre, and No. 6 CGH
had moved to Douvres-la-Délivrande.
As the Allied armies advanced, Canadian
hospitals moved to the Rouen and Dieppe
areas, later to Antwerp and Germany.
Lance
Corporal W.J. Curtis,
Royal Canadian Army Medical
Corps, fixes the burned
leg of a French boy, while
his young brother looks
on. Between Colomby-sur-Thaon
and Villons-les-Buissons,
Normandy, 19 June 1944.
|
| Photo
by Ken Bell. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-141703. |
|
The need to treat the wounded as
close to the front as possible meant
that working conditions were seldom
optimal. Besides coping with enemy
fire and air raids, medical facilities
also had to deal with the pernicious
dust and flies that were ubiquitous
in Normandy:
Most camp sites were
in or adjoined apple orchards, in
which apples rolled on the ground
in thousands. Bodies of horses,
cattle, sheep and men lay rotting
and unburied over Normandy. Consequently,
fly control was an impossibility.
In addition dust rolled over the
area in billowing clouds, penetrating
everything and probably acted as
an additional source of infection.
(52 Mobile Field Hospital, Operation
Record Book, June and July 1944,
quoted in Bill Rawling, Death
Their Enemy: Canadian Medical Practitioners
and War, 2001, p. 204).
Medics occasionally found themselves
right in the thick of the fighting,
as during the assault on Walcheren
Island in the autumn of 1944. John
Hillsman, with No. 8 FSU, described
the situation immediately following
the amphibious landings on the 1st
of November:
We had to crawl two
hundred yards on our bellies with
the exploding ammunition [from a
stricken assault vehicle] shooting
at us from one side and the Germans
from the other. We finally reached
the [No. 10 FDS] tent and found
that the Staff Sergeant had organized
a rescue team and was going down
in that blazing mess and bringing
out the survivors. One of the medicals
went inside of an exploding Alligator
to reach a wounded Commando. He
was blown half in two by a mortar
bomb. For the next half hour we
lay on our faces in the sand dressing
wounds, stopping hemorrhages and
splinting fractures. Constant explosions
were blowing sand over us as we
worked. Our heads were retracted
down in our helmets until the edge
of the damned things almost reached
our shoulders (John Hillsman, quoted
in Bill Rawling, Death Their
Enemy: Canadian Medical Practitioners
and War, 2001, p. 211).
Two days passed before 8 FSU was
able to properly set up and care for
casualties.
 |
Captain A.W. Hardy, Medical
Officer with the West
Nova Scotia Regiment,
lying wounded in a copse,
shot through the foot
by Italian paratrooper
while treating a wounded
West Nova Scotian, with
Private W.E. Dexter, WNSR,
a stretcher-bearer who
was wounded in the head.
Near Santa Christina,
Italy, September 1943.
|
| Photo
by Terry F. Rowe. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-
115198. |
|
What kinds of injuries did medical
personnel have to treat? The proportion
of various casualties reported by
No. 15 Field Ambulance of 4th Canadian
Armoured Division in September 1944
was representative of the Army as
a whole: 10% of wounds were caused
by rifles, 17.5% by machine guns,
14.5% by mortars, and almost 43% by
artillery; about 27% of casualties
had multiple wounds. Although these
proportions would vary depending on
the nature of the campaign being waged,
artillery remained the main killer
throughout the war. Nonetheless, a
few statistics testify to the advances
that had been made in battlefield
medicine. The mortality rate among
the wounded dropped to 66 per thousand
from 114 per thousand in the Great
War, and thanks to improved sanitation,
hygiene, and treatment methods, less
than 1% of fatalities were due to
disease.
 |
Death,
the unavoidable reality of war.
These Canadian soldiers were
killed while on patrol duty
in Wyler, Germany, 9 February
1945.
|
| Photo
by Michael M. Dean. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-161313. |
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