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  Vol. 134 No. 9, September 1999 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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  Moments in Surgical History
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Base or General Hospitals During the Civil War

Ira M. Rutkow, MD, MPH, DrPH

Arch Surg. 1999;134:1021.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text and any section headings.

FOLLOWING DEFINITIVE field surgery, the large volume of Civil War casualties dictated relatively swift transfer to a base or general hospital. These institutions were situated in major urban areas and provided a final health care facility for hundreds of thousands of injured and seriously wounded. In many instances, the wounded and postoperative patients were taken from the field hospitals and loaded onto the floors of railroad freight cars, which were covered with layer upon layer of straw. These trains were marked, in enormous red letters, "US Hospital Train," and the locomotive, boiler, and tender were also painted red. After the dreadful horrors of the field hospital and the painful, lurching journey aboard a hospital train or steamboat, the general hospital proved to be a godsend to the wounded.


The Satterlee USA General Hospital in West Philadelphia, Pa, comprised 34 wards and more than 4500 . . . [Full Text of this Article]



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