
Survival and Health
In any war, the survival and health of
serving personnel are largely due to the efforts and organisation of their
medical personnel. The Australian doctors, dentists, nurses,
stretcher-bearers and orderlies who served in Korea were no exception:
they faced a wide variety of medical problems and challenges over the
course of the war. Some Australian doctors who served in Korea were young,
and had received little or no specific medical training for the trauma and
injuries they would face there.
Apart from battle-related wounds, weather
was a major factor in poor health, particularly among the ground troops
who were forced to live in the cold of winter and in the extreme heat of
summer. During the first year of the war, casualties were caused roughly
in equal numbers by enemy action and the cold.
The incidence of frostbite was so severe in
the first winter of 1950-51 that many of those afflicted had to be
evacuated to Japan for treatment, which sometimes included amputation.
Medicines, including penicillin, froze and
medical personnel expecting casualties warmed phials of medication in
their pockets. In summer, heat and poor sanitation caused their own
medical problems.
The maintenance of good hygiene was
crucial.
Living in trenches was also responsible for
medical complications, just as it had been for soldiers on the Western
Front in the First World War. A condition called "Trench Foot"
in the First World War and "Rice-Paddy Feet" in Korea was the
same problem.
As in most wars, new techniques in medicine
were pioneered. Australian medical teams in Korea developed new treatments
in the repair of damaged blood vessels, saving many damaged limbs from
amputation.
Moving casualties out
Because of medical evacuations by
helicopter, the time taken to transport wounded to an established and
well-supplied medical facility was normally quite short. However, this
method had its limitations. Only two stretcher cases and two walking
wounded soldiers could be evacuated at a time, and they could not receive
treatment while in transit. In snowy conditions, when helicopters could
not be used, medical evacuations had to be undertaken on the ground, often
taking many hours to transport wounded to Regimental Aid Posts (RAP).
In the face of the rough terrain and the
poor condition of local roads, helicopter evacuation was frequently the
only option.
Aerial evacuation also decreased the need
for medical teams to be near the front-lines, or to be at risk of being
captured as prisoners, a risk for many medical personnel during the Second
World War. Nonetheless, at the front lines there were still stretcher
bearers and medical personnel working in the battalions or as part of a
field ambulance, who recovered the wounded and applied first aid.
Nurses
Twenty nurses of the RAAF served in Korea,
assisting with the evacuation and care of the wounded. In Japan, there was
a large general hospital based in Kure, which received many casualties
that were evacuated by air. In Iwakuni, six Australian nurses were
attached to the RAAF hospital, assisting aeromedical evacuations. More
than 12,000 casualties were flown out of Korea by the RAAF medical teams,
often in difficult conditions.
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A RAAF nursing sister prepares a wounded patient
for a medical evacuation from Korea to Japan. (AWM JK0184)
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Working conditions
Australian medical personnel in Korea often
worked in very primitive conditions, where access to running water,
electricity and medical equipment was extremely difficult.
There were also psychological casualties. Medical personnel were sometimes
called upon to help troops cope with the distress and trauma of what they
faced.
Ill health after the war was a constant reminder to some men of their time
in Korea.
(Extract from Out in the Cold,
The Australian War Memorial's online exhibition on
Korea)
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