History, asked by DTA18N09, 7 months ago

collect information about doctors/nurses during world war 1 (don't write i don't know just said this question 1 min ago 1 person says i don't know this is how u stealing points!!!!!!!!)

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer: Care of the injured soldier is as old as war.  And war is as old as history.  Perhaps older.  People were fighting and hurting one another back into the old stone age, long before organized societies and armies.  Military medicine goes back a very long way.  In fact, to the very first civilizations.  From around 4000 BCE to around 1500 BCE, organized civilization arose separately in Mesopotamia and Egypt; the Indus River valley, present-day Pakistan and India; the Yangtze River valley in China; and the Americas, meso-America and the Andes.  All were agriculturally based, and featured organized governments and armies supported by hereditary ruling and military castes.  Without exception, all were warlike.

Even in the ancient world, all armies had to care for their wounded.  But the civilizations themselves varied widely in their underlying medical institutions.  Some cultures had such rudimentary medical care that wounded soldiers were given hardly more than token care, others had fairly sophisticated treatment of wounds. Roman military medicine most closely approached what we have today.

HOPE IT HELPS

Answered by yashikarohilla
1

Answer:

Explanation:

Care of the injured soldier is as old as war.  And war is as old as history.  Perhaps older.  People were fighting and hurting one another back into the old stone age, long before organized societies and armies.  Military medicine goes back a very long way.  In fact, to the very first civilizations.  From around 4000 BCE to around 1500 BCE, organized civilization arose separately in Mesopotamia and Egypt; the Indus River valley, present-day Pakistan and India; the Yangtze River valley in China; and the Americas, meso-America and the Andes.  All were agriculturally based, and featured organized governments and armies supported by hereditary ruling and military castes.  Without exception, all were warlike.

Even in the ancient world, all armies had to care for their wounded.  But the civilizations themselves varied widely in their underlying medical institutions.  Some cultures had such rudimentary medical care that wounded soldiers were given hardly more than token care, others had fairly sophisticated treatment of wounds. Roman military medicine most closely approached what we have today.

HOPE IT HELPS

Similar questions