< Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 88.djvu
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Hospital Work on the Firing Line

��UNITED STATES field hospitals, the least understood divisional units in the United States army, have been newly equipped in order that they may be more mobile during battle. The field hospital service of our army, as it is constituted today, is one of the best in the world.

Contrary to popular opinion, field hos- pital men are trained soldiers. They do their most important work under fire, and in war, their dead and wounded rank next to infantry in number. While the officers of field hospitals are surgeons and while the privates have been in- structed thoroughly in first aid work, the real duty of the field hospital men during battle is to keep the front clear of savable wounded men. The field hos- pital problem is one of rapid transporta- tion. During the past four years, since the system conceived by Tripler during the Civil War has been put into opera- tion, every scheme to make it possible for field hospital officers and men to work swiftly has been resorted to.

Officers and men of the hospitals are walking dispensaries. The officers carry surgical instruments, extra hypo- dermic needles, needles, ligatures, medi- cines, first aid packets, large iodine bot- tles, large water bottles and cups, diag- nosis tags. During battle the officers can spend little or no time in dressing wounds or in "cooling the fevered brows" of fallen soldiers. Their time is occupied in directing the bearer-men, or littermen, who carry wounded soldiers to the field hospitals just outside the line of fire. While doing this transportation work, the stretcher bearers are really more under fire than the fighting soldiers.

The new equipment furnished the field hospital men is as compact and as light as possible. Each man carries a meat can, a bacon bag, knife, fork and spoon, a water bottle, ten first aid pack- ets, iodine swabs, five plain gauze ban- dages, safety, pins and adhesive plaster, corrosive sublimate gauze, diagnosis tags and pencil, a large water bot- tle, instrument cases, forceps, scissors, and a hatchet. The enlisted men are

��thoroughly trained in the uses of the in- struments they carry. When they have time, they administer first aid treatment to wounded men, but if they are pressed for time in the heat of battle, they devote all their energy to getting savable wound- ed men to a point where they may be in comparative safety while awaiting sur- gical treatment.

The men are taught that their work is to protect Uncle Sam's fighting mate- rial. They are not permitted to spend any time at the front with fatally wound- ed men, but to strain every nerve in saving wounded men who can be patched up to fight again. No nurses are per- mitted at the front. They are at the base hospitals, usually out of range of the enemy's guns. It is possible to take down and pack up on mule-drawn ambulances the entire camp equipment of a field hospital in two hours.

Ordinarily, that is, in time of peace, the camp tentage of a field hospital is as follows : five small pyramidal tents for officers, nine large pyramidal tents for soldiers, five tropical hospital tents for kitchen, stores, mess, dispensary and op- erating room, six ward tents each con- containing thirty-six beds, and tents for officers', patients', and men's latrines, with one for the men's bath. In field serv- ice the large pyramidal tents are not car- ried, and one thousand four hundred and ninety-eight pounds of weight are saved. No tent furniture or cots are carried.

The field hospital equipment for serv- ice weighs eight tons and is transported on eight four-mule wagons, which are used for ambulances. The army is now experimenting with motor cars to sup- plant the mule-drawn ambulances, since a similar equipment serving with the American Ambulance on the French front has proved remarkably successful. Fifteen horses — seven for the officers, two for the major, and eight for enlisted men — go with the field hospital equip- ment. The organization carries three days' rations, three pounds to a man, or eight hundred and ten pounds, and one thousand three hundred and sixty-eight pounds of forage for the animals.

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