Field hospital
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A field hospital is a large mobile medical unit that temporarily takes care of casualties on-site before they can be safely transported to more permanent hospital facilities. They would stay about two miles behind the first line of soldiers. The concept was inherited from the battlefield (such urban environment, the field hospital is often established in an easily accessible and highly visible building (e.g. restaurant, school, etc.). In case of an airborne structure, the mobile medical kit is often placed in normalized container; the container itself is then used as shelter.
Field hospitals were originally called ambulances.
[edit] See also
- United States
[edit] External links
- The Journey, by surgeon E. T. Rulison, Jr., M.D., F.A.C.S., firsthand account and photographs of the 51st Evacuation Hospital during World War II
- The Nurses of the 51st Evac Hospital In WWII, by nurse First Lieutenant Tillie (Horath) Kehrer, firsthand account and photographs of the 51st Evacuation Hospital during World War II
- http://www.pklhealthcare.co.uk/field_hospitals.asp Supplier of field hospitals to the US Army
- Utilis SAS, Designer and Supplier of field hospitals
This military article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |