A Canadian physician and medical innovator, Norman Bethune struggled throughout his life to overcome deep emotional scars. Born in Ontario in 1890 to fanatical religious zealots, Bethune was deeply wounded by an unloving mother and a weak father whom he hated. Sexually inhibited and given to outbursts of near psychopathic rage, this wounded doctor healed himself through the healing others. In the mid-1930s, Bethune emerged as a renowned surgeon fighting the twin plagues of disease and fascism. During the Spanish Civil War, when Francisco Franco launched his offensive, Bethune travelled quickly to Madrid, organized a mobile transfusion service and, often under fire, transported blood to the wounded at the front lines. This book presents the complexity of Norman Bethune's unique activities and personality as they intersect with history: his engagement with medical, political, and military civil war players, as well as the Communist party * his cadaver blood transfusion work with the Nobel Prize-winning geneticist Hermann Muller * the profound effect that the Malaga atrocity had on him, and the role it played in his attempt to build "children's cities" outside war zones * his meeting with Graham Spry, a high-ranking functionary in the Canadian social democratic party, the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation/CCF * the unravelling of Bethune's romantic relationship with the Swedish journalist Kasja Rothman * the implications of his friendship with Henning Sorensen, possibly a secret member of the Communist Party of Canada * the circumstances of the conspiracy that led to Bethune's ejection from Spain. The book concludes with Norman Bethune's political tour throughout North America, raising funds and public awareness on behalf of the Spanish Republic.
By Alfred Hitchcock , of Massachusetts , the appointment of Brigade - Surgeon of Volunteers , April 4 , 1862 . GENERAL ORDERS NO . 77 . War Department , Adjutant - General's Office , Washington , July 11 , 1862 .
History of military medicine. 1 (1992)
This book will be of interest to anyone fascinated with life during the 1860s, the Civil War, the history of medicine, the history of Pittsburgh, Chambersburg, and their environs, and West Virginia, from where most of the letters were ...
The Medical Department: Medical Service in the War Against Japan
Concomitant cranial and ocular combat injuries during Operation Iraqi Freedom . J Trauma . 2009 ; 67 ( 3 ) : 516–520 . 248. Christine E. Maintaining Military Medical Skills During Peacetime : Outlining and Assessing a New Approach .
Fundamentals of Military Medicine
This volume offers a new cultural approach to the history of medicine and wounding in the First World War, placing personal experiences of pain into the social, cultural, and political contexts of military medical institutions.
Wounded is the story of the men and women who made it possible.
During the Peninsular War, for example, for every soldier dying of a wound, four succumbed to disease. This book examines the development and evolution of surgical practice against this overwhelming risk of death due to disease.
The is the recollection of combat in Europe during World War II of then naive, nineteen-year-old Army medic Robert L. Smith, responsible for saving the lives of severely wounded GIs under the worst possible conditions.