- Hospitals - 1914-1918-Online
Hospitals framed and configured the convalescence of wounded and sick soldiers during the Great War Medical facilities behind the lines and in the rear often operated under difficult conditions Hospitals at home, by contrast, were safer, more modern and better equipped
- Medical treatment of Australian soldiers in World War I
Weapons used during trench warfare created terrible injuries that required complex medical treatment The British forces developed a triage to prioritise the treatment of wounded soldiers Australian medical and nursing units cared for the sick and wounded wherever the men served
- List of Australian Army medical units in World War I - Wikipedia
1st Australian General Hospital (Queensland) – Heliopolis, Egypt January 1915 to March 1916; Rouen, France to 1918; then Sutton Veny, England [1] 2nd Australian General Hospital (New South Wales) was in Cairo in 1915
- 1918: Australias medical personnel - Australian War Memorial
Australian medical personnel worked in a variety of settings, from casualty clearing stations close to the front lines, to large general hospitals in France and England, treating many different nationalities- Allied and enemy
- Medical Evacuation Chain - World War 1 - Stationary Hospital
Two stationary hospitals were set up as small hospitals in forward areas during World War I No 1 Australian Stationary Hospital served on Gallipoli and became No 3 Australian Auxiliary Hospital in 1916
- First World War hospitals – Historic Hospitals
War-time conditions made the need for a local hospital even greater, as beds in the London hospitals, where people from Letchworth had gone for surgery, were reserved for the military, and the nearest cottage hospital at Hitchin could not be relied on to have free beds for patients from Letchworth
- Collections: World War 1, 1914-1918 Subjects: Hospitals, Military . . .
1 Base Hospital 34 in the World War Publication: Philadelphia : Lyon Armor, 1922 Subject (s): Hospitals, Military World War I France United States Army Base Hospital No 34
- Australian Army Medical Corps in World War I - Anzac Portal
During World War I, the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) suffered 58,339 deaths and 151,948 wounded To help deal with so many injured and sick soldiers, the Australian Army Medical Corps was expanded By 1918, the Australian medical units included many specialist units, such as sanitary sections
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