Medicine on the Western Front Flashcards

1
Q

When did WW1 start and end?

A

1914-18

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2
Q

Learn the diagrams for trenches

A
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3
Q

Name and explain all he different types of trenches

A

Frontline trench- where attacks where made from

Support trench- trench behind the frontline trench. Troops would go here if frontline was under attack

Reserve trench- where reserve troops could organise a counter attack in the frontline was captured by he enemy

Communication trench- ran between other trenches to pass on information

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4
Q

What are dugouts?

A

Holes in the side of trenches where men could take cover

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5
Q

What is the area between two opposing lines of trenches called?

A

No-man’s-land

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6
Q

Name the battles in order

A

1914: 1st Battle of Ypres
1915: 2nd Battle of Ypres
1916: the Battle of the Somme
1917: the Battle of Arras
1917: the 3rd Battle of Ypres
1917: the Battle of Cambrai

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7
Q

Give a summary of the First Battle of Ypres

A

.In the autumn
.Germans launched an attack on British in Ypres, Belgium
.Lost tens of thousand of troops but kept in control of Ypres meaning they kept in control of the English Channel ports

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8
Q

Why were the ports so important for Britain to keep control of?

A

So that supplies and reinforcement could reach them from Britain

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9
Q

What was hill 60 and how was it a success for the British?

A

Hill 60 was a man made hill that the Germans had captured. It’s height gave them an advantage. The British used mining. They tunnelled under the hill and blew the top of Hill 60 off so British could retake the high ground.

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10
Q

What is a salient?

A

A narrow area of a battlefield where an army has pushed its front line forward into enemy territory so is surrounded on many sides by enemy.

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11
Q

What was the importance of the 2nd Battle of Ypres?

A

It was the first time the German’s used chlorine gas on the Western Front.

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12
Q

Why did the ground in Arras being chalky benefit the British?

A

It was easy to tunnel through. The British linked the existing caves and tunnels around Arras to act as shelters against German attacks.

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13
Q

How successful was the Battle of Arras to the British?

A

Not very. They advanced 8 miles but there were nearly 100,000+ British casualties

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13
Q

What of importance was used in the Battle of Cambrai? What problem did they overcome?

A

Tanks. Overcame problem of barbed wire.

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13
Q

Where was the Third Battle of Ypres and why was it not much of a success to the British.

A

Passchendaele
The weather was bad- rain made the ground waterlogged.

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14
Q

What were the benefits and problems of Horse-drawn ambulances?

A

Benefits:
.did not break down

Problems:
.could not cope with the number of casualties
.it would shake a lot which could make injuries worse

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15
Q

What were the benefits and problems with motorised ambulances?

A

Benefits:
.smoother journey meant injuries were not made worse
.a faster way to transport injured soldiers

Problems:
.broke down in muddy conditions

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16
Q

Other than horse-drawn ambulances and motorised ambulances how else could patients be transported?

A

By train or by canal barge (long boat)

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17
Q

Name some features of ambulance trains

A

.had spaces for stretchers fitted in carriage
.some had operating theatres
.more comfortable journey

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18
Q

What was the problem with stretchers and stretcher bearers?

A

.sometimes had to work in night and couldn’t see route
.injured outnumbered stretcher bearers
.had to get passed barbed wire and bd conditions with risk of getting killed themselves

19
Q

What was trench fever spread by? How was it prevented?

A

Lice
.disinfected clothes and bedding
.soldiers picked lice of clothes and ran seam with fire
.
.

20
Q

How would trench foot develop? What could it turn to if untreated and if so what would you have to do?

A

Waterlogged trenches
Gangrene -> amputation

21
Q

By 1915, what measures were put in place to prevent trench foot?

A

.encourage to rub whale oil on foot
.ordered to change socks twice a day but not always possible

22
Q

What was shell shock called before it was diagnosed way after the war?

A

“Not yet diagnosed. Nervous”

23
Q

What was most responsible for wounds?

A

high-explosive shells and shrapnel were responsible for 58 percent of wounds

24
Q

What is aseptic surgery?

A

Surgery where microbes are prevented from getting into a wound in the first place, rather than being killed off with antiseptic

25
Q

How did shells work?

A

When a shell exploded, it killed anyone close by. It also scattered shrapnel that meant anyone in the way would be wounded.

26
Q

What was the solution to infections from bullets or barbed wire?

A

Anti- tetanus injection at the end of 1914

27
Q

What was the solution to shrapnel and bullets to the head? How successful was it?

A

In 1915, the metal Brodie helmet was introduced reducing fatal head wounds by 80%

28
Q

How did chlorine gas kill?

A

By suffocation

29
Q

What was phosgene?

A

A gas withe affects similar to chlorine gas but acted faster

30
Q

What was mustard gas?

A

An odourless gas that caused blisters inside and outside of the body. It can use burn skin through clothes.

30
Q

What was the RAMC?

A

Branch of army responsible for medical care.

31
Q

What was FANY?

A

The first women’s organisation to send billy terra to Western Front to support medical services e.g driving ambulances and providing emergency first aid

32
Q

What were the Regimental Aid Posts? What was the limitation?

A

Located around 200m of the frontline to treat wounded men who would either walk themselves in or be carried in.

Could not deal with serious injuries.

32
Q

Who did the Dressing Stations car for?

A

Men too seriously injured to be cared for at the RAPs. Walked or were carried.

33
Q

What were casualty clearing stations?

A

Trainees doctors and nurses helping patients of 3 groups (triage): severely wounded, walking wounded, hospital cases- transported to hospital

34
Q

What were base hospitals and what were the limitations?

A

Located on the coast so that men could easily be transported back to Britain. Continued treatment that became in casualty clearing stations.

Took a while to get to. By then patients condition might have worsened

35
Q

How would they treat infected wounds?

A

Wound excision- cut away infected tissue around the wound then close it by stitching

Amputation

36
Q

True or false:
They had x-rays on the western front

Explain

A

True
They would have static x-rays in Base Hospitals and large casualty clearings stations
There were only a very few amount of mobile x-rays used

37
Q

Name 3 problems with blood transfusions and the solutions to each

A

1)Blood had to be immediately used or would clot -> portable blood transfusions kit and a blood bottle to control flow of blood to stop from clotting

2)Not able to store blood -> 1916: added citrate glucose to blood to allow it to be stored for a month

3)The patient’s body did not always accept the donor’s blood -> discovered type O blood could be safely transfused into anyone with reduced risk of rejection

38
Q

What were surgeries like in the 20th century?

A

Aseptic:
.medical staff washed hands before entering operating theatre
.rubber gloves worn
.air was sterilised

39
Q

What percentage of wounds were to the head, face and neck in the British sector?

A

20%

40
Q

What were the problems withs brain surgery?

A

.infection was still a problem
.very few doctors with experience of neurosurgery

41
Q

What did Harold Gilles do?

A

started facial reconstruction (plastic surgery?

42
Q

What did Harvey Cushing do?

A

.Used magnets to remove fragments of metal from brain
.Used local aesthetic rather than general aesthetic because brain swelled in general aesthetic increasing risk

43
Q

What did Hugh Owens invent and what did it do?

A

Thomas splint
Pulled the bones lengthways to stop them rubbing on each other. Prevented blood loss too.

44
Q

What were the survival rates of leg fractures from before and after the Thomas splint?

A

20%- 80%