Emergency War Surgery NATO Handbook: Part I: Types of Wounds and Injuries: Chapter
VII: Mass Causalties in Thermonuclear Warfare
Logistics Of Casualty Management
United States Department of Defense
If nuclear weapons are employed within the theater, the entire medical evacuation and
treatment system will be severely overburdened and some system of classification and
sorting of casualties must be added to the normal procedures of evacuation and
hospitalization. In addition, a system must be established to hold casualties who are too
seriously injured to remain with their units, but who do not need to or cannot be
hospitalized. These two requirements, the sorting of casualties and the holding of the
excess numbers, must be planned for as part of the normal organization and operation of
the medical support system in a theater of operations.
In applying the principle of providing the greatest good for the greatest number to the
management of mass casualties, a field medical system must face and solve several
problems. The location and number of casualties must be determined. This requires intact
communications, since isolated units on a dispersed battlefield could suffer severe
casualties and be unable to notify higher headquarters. Subsequent delay in initiating
treatment and hospitalization will result in greatly increased morbidity and mortality.
The casualties must be evacuated. In front-line areas, follow-up enemy action
exploiting the use of nuclear weapons could greatly hinder or prevent evacuation. In rear
areas, adequate evacuation means may not be available to handle the massive number of
casualties produced by an attack. The availability of helicopters would help since they
can be diverted from one area to another much more readily than ground transportation. The
use of nonmedical transportation systems may be required but cannot be planned on.
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Operational Medicine 2001
Health Care in Military Settings
Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
Department of the Navy
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Operational Medicine
Health Care in Military Settings
CAPT Michael John Hughey, MC, USNR
NAVMED P-5139
January 1, 2001 |
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