
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
The Great War saw casualties on an industrial scale. The changing face of warfare placed demands on the medical profession like no conflict before or since. How did medicine adapt to cope with the demands of Great War casualties?
We begin at Lijssenthoek Cemetery at the grave of Nurse Nellie Spindler who was killed by shell fire while working at a CCS near Brandhoek, and is the only female buried amongst 10,000 men. We look at the chain of evacuation, the complex series of medical facilities that moved a man from the battlefield to the hospital, and the remarkable feats of organisation that made this possible.
We look at the work of Harold Dakin, a softly spoken tank-top-loving Bridge playing chemist whose discovery of an antiseptic solution revolutionised the survival rates of wounded soldiers. We discover the history of the "Petites Curies" wagons that patrolled the battlefields, and find out the origins of the "Fagman". We examine the work of a Canadian surgeon whose chance discovery changed the way blood transfusions were managed forever, and conclude by looking at the pioneering work of Harold Gillies, the plastic surgeon who changed the lives of thousands of mutilated soldiers, whose life is the subject of the remarkable book "The Facemaker".
Support the podcast
https://www.buymeacoffee.com/footstepsblog
https://www.patreon.com/footstepsofthefallen
By Matt Dixon4.9
2727 ratings
Send us a text
The Great War saw casualties on an industrial scale. The changing face of warfare placed demands on the medical profession like no conflict before or since. How did medicine adapt to cope with the demands of Great War casualties?
We begin at Lijssenthoek Cemetery at the grave of Nurse Nellie Spindler who was killed by shell fire while working at a CCS near Brandhoek, and is the only female buried amongst 10,000 men. We look at the chain of evacuation, the complex series of medical facilities that moved a man from the battlefield to the hospital, and the remarkable feats of organisation that made this possible.
We look at the work of Harold Dakin, a softly spoken tank-top-loving Bridge playing chemist whose discovery of an antiseptic solution revolutionised the survival rates of wounded soldiers. We discover the history of the "Petites Curies" wagons that patrolled the battlefields, and find out the origins of the "Fagman". We examine the work of a Canadian surgeon whose chance discovery changed the way blood transfusions were managed forever, and conclude by looking at the pioneering work of Harold Gillies, the plastic surgeon who changed the lives of thousands of mutilated soldiers, whose life is the subject of the remarkable book "The Facemaker".
Support the podcast
https://www.buymeacoffee.com/footstepsblog
https://www.patreon.com/footstepsofthefallen

3,981 Listeners

1,239 Listeners

4,792 Listeners

671 Listeners

10 Listeners

1,369 Listeners

82 Listeners

188 Listeners

5,123 Listeners

1,842 Listeners

2,830 Listeners

326 Listeners

115 Listeners

12 Listeners

98 Listeners