Category Archives: Civil War Medicine

Choose Science

 “If you want to save your child from polio, you can pray or you can inoculate.  Choose science.”  — Carl Sagan, The Demon-Haunted World

Far be it for me to provide scientific illiterates like Donald Trump and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. with an appreciation of vaccine science.  For them and their admirers, political commitments preclude an understanding of the human immune system, how vaccines work, and how scientists go about creating them and demonstrating their safety and efficacy.  So let’s take a different approach.  Let’s try to cultivate an appreciation of vaccine science that is strictly historical and begins with the Revolutionary War.  In this way, perhaps, vaccine skeptics can edge toward an appreciation of the foundational role of vaccination and its precursor, inoculation, to American greatness in the pre-Trump era.

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Dear Anti-Vaxxers:

Did you know that at the outset of the Revolutionary War,  inoculation against smallpox – the insertion of  pus from the scabs and pustules of smallpox sufferers into arms of healthy soldiers to induce typically mild attacks of smallpox – was a crucial instrument of strategic advantage for British and Continental forces alike?  When inoculated British troops came into contact with healthy Continental soldiers and noncombatants, that is, the latter frequently contracted smallpox in its unattenuated, occasionally lethal form.  The only defense against disablement-by-smallpox, it turned out, was inoculation, since inoculated soldiers and civilians, after recovery, were immunized against smallpox in both its deadly and attenuated forms.

Did you know that when George Washington realized that overcoming smallpox was crucial to winning the War of  Independence, he indeed mandated the inoculation of the entire Continental Army?   His order of 5 February 1777 also sent a clear message to all 13 colonies:  American governments – local, state, and national – were obligated to “protect public health by providing broad access to inoculation.”[1]

Did you know that when Benjamin Waterhouse began shipping  Edward Jenner’s smallpox vaccine to America in 1800, George Washington, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson hailed it as the greatest discovery of modern medicine?  When Jefferson became president in 1801, he pledged to introduce the vaccine to the American public because “it will be a great service indeed rendered to human nature to strike off the catalogue of its evils so great a one as the smallpox.”

Did you know that Jefferson’s successor, James Madison, signed into law in 1813 “An Act to Encourage Vaccination”?  And did you know that among its provisions was the requirement that the U.S. postal service “carry mail containing vaccine materials free of charge.[2]

Did you know that during the Civil War, Union and Confederate Armies were so desperate to vaccinate their troops against smallpox that they had their doctors cooperate in harvesting “vaccine matter” from the lymph of heathy children and infants, especially the offspring of the formerly enslaved?[3]

Did you know that when the Civil War ended, doctors from North and South joined forces to achieve a better understanding of smallpox vaccination methods?[4]  They believed an epidemiological understanding of effective vaccination was a shared mission in the service of the re-united nation.

Did you know that in 1893 New York State legislators passed a law requiring public schools to deny enrollment to any child who could not present proof of vaccination, and that the law was extended to private and parochial schools via the Jones-Tallett amendment of 1915?[5]  And did you know that the legislators’ commitment to vaccination for all children was reaffirmed a half century later, when Title XIX of the Social Security Act of 1965 mandated “the right of every American child to receive comprehensive pediatric care, including vaccinations.”[6]

Two 13-year-old classmates exposed to the same strain of smallpox at the same time in their classroom in Leicester, England in 1901. One was vaccinated against smallpox in infancy. The other was not.

Did you know that throughout the 19th century, diphtheria was “the dreaded killer that stalked young children”?[7]   It was an  upper-respiratory inflammation of such severity that it gave rise to a  “pseudomembrane” that covered the pharynx and larynx and led to death by  asphyxiation.    Then, in the early 1890s, Emile Roux and his team at the Pasteur Institute discovered that horses not only withstood repeated inoculation with live diphtheria bacteria, but their blood, purified into an injectable serum, both restored infected children (and adults) to health and provided healthy kids with short-term immunity.  No sooner did the serum become commercially available in 1895 than the U.S. death rate among hospitalized diphtheria patients was cut in half  – an astonishing fact for the time.  By 1913, when the “Shick test” permitted on-the-spot testing for diphtheria, public health nurses and doctors discovered that 30% of NYC school children tested positive for the disease.  Injections of serum saved the vast majority and immunized their healthy classmates.  New York’s program of diphtheria immunization was copied by municipalities throughout the country. In the early 1930s, diphtheria serum gave way to a long-lasting toxoid vaccine, and in the 1940s, given in combination with pertussis and tetanus vaccines (DBT), diphtheria, “the plague among children” (Noah Webster), became a horror of the past.

A ghostly Skeleton, representing diphtheria, reaches out to strangle a sick child. Watercolor by Richard Tennant Cooper (1885–1957), commissioned by Henry S. Wellcome c. 1912 and now in the Wellcome Collection

Did you know that in Jacobson v. Massachusetts, a landmark decision of 1905, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the constitutionality of compulsory vaccination laws? And then, in 1922, in Zucht v. King, the Court stated that “no constitutional right was infringed by excluding unvaccinated children from school.”  The decision was written by Louis Brandeis.[8]

Did you know that in 1909 the U.S. Army made typhoid vaccination compulsory for all soldiers, and the requirement reduced the typhoid rate among troops from 243 per 100,000 in 1909 to 4.4 per 100,000 in three years?[9]  When America entered WWI in 1917, troops sailing to France had to be vaccinated.  Those who had not received their shots stateside received them on arriving at their camps.  Vaccination was not negotiable.  The obligation to live and fight for the nation trumped the freedom to contract typhoid, suffer, and possibly die.

Did you know that in the mid-1950s, when Cold War tensions peaked, mass polio vaccination was such a global imperative that it brought together the United States and Soviet Union?   In 1956, with the KGB in tow, two leading Russian virologists journeyed to Albert Sabin’s laboratory in Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, while Sabin in turn flew to Moscow to continue the brainstorming.  The short-term result was mass trials that confirmed with finality the safety and efficacy of the Sabin vaccine, while bringing its benefits to 10 million Russian school children and several million young Russian adults.[10]  The long-term result was the Global Polio Eradication Initiative that began in 1988 and eradicated polio transmission everywhere in the world except Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Did you know that following the development of a freeze-dried smallpox vaccine by Soviet scientists in 1958, Soviet Deputy Health Minister Viktor  Zhdanov and American public health epidemiologist Donald Henderson jointly waged a 10-year international campaign to raise enough money to make the vaccine available world-wide?[11]  The result of their campaign, in partnership with WHO, was the elimination of smallpox by 1977.[12]

Did you know that in 1963 a severe outbreak of rubella (German measles) led the U.S. Congress to approve the “Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment” amendments to Title XIX of the Social Security Act of 1965?  The amendments mandated the right of every American child to comprehensive pediatric care, including vaccinations.[13]

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Now, in 2025, a segment of the population has reclaimed the mindset of antebellum America, when the Founding Fathers’ belief that medical progress safeguarded democracy gave way to something far less enlightened: the belief that everyone can be his or her own doctor.  Sadly, what the historian Joseph Kett termed the Dark Age of American medicine[14] has been revived among those newly skeptical of vaccination, and especially resistant to compulsory vaccination of children.  In its place, they proffer a contemporary variant of the anti-elitist cry of the Jacksonian era:  Every man his own doctor; every man his own remedies.  Transposed to the early 20th century, the Jacksonian cry resurfaced as resistance to smallpox vaccination.  To the anti-vaxxers of the time, the vaccine that, in its inoculatory form, helped win the Revolutionary War, was state-sanctioned trespassing on a person’s body.[15]  Now, in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic of 2020, the body has been politicized yet again.

In the case of President Donald Trump and Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert Kennedy, Jr., scientific ignorance of breathtaking proportions carries the prescientific regression back to ancient times.  When Plague, in the form of coronavirus, returned to America in 2020, legions of Trump followers followed the lead of a president whose understanding of viral infection followed the Galenic belief that whole-body states require whole-body remedies.  Disinfectants like Chlorox, he announced to the nation, kill microbes when we wipe our countertops with it.  Why then, he mused, can’t we destroy the coronavirus by injecting bleach into our veins?  What bleach does to healthy tissue, blood chemistry, and internal organs – these are questions an inquiring 8th grader might ask her teacher.  But they could not occur to a medieval physician or a boastfully ignorant President.  In Trump-world, as I observed elsewhere,[16] “there is no possibility of weighing the pros and cons of specific treatments for specific ailments (read: different types of infection, local and systemic).  The concept of immunological specificity is literally unthinkable.”  As to ingestion of hydroxychloroquine tablets, another touted Trump remedy for coronavirus, “More Deaths, No Benefit” begins the VA Virus Study reporting on Trump’s preferred Covid-19 treatment put forth by Trump.[17]

Trump’s HSS Secretary, Robert Kennedy, Jr. would not be among the inquiring 8th graders.  When coronavirus reached America, Trump at least followed a medieval script.  Kennedy Jr., encased in two decades of anti-vaccine claptrap, did not need a script. He simply absorbed coronavirus into an ongoing narrative of fabrication, misinformation, and bizarre conspiracy theories calculated to scare people away from vaccination.

As HHS Secretary, Kennedy Jr.’s mission has been to complexify access to coronavirus vaccines.  Most recently, he directed the CDC to rescind its recommendation of Covid-19 vaccination for pregnant women and healthy young children.  The triumph of scientists in creating safe genetic RNA vaccines could not dislodge the medieval mindset and paranoid delusions that have long been his stock in trade.  No, Mr. Secretary, Covid-19 was not engineered to attack Caucasians and African Americans while sparing Ashkenazi Jews and the Chinese.  No, Covid-19 vaccines were not created to effect governmental control via implanted microchips.  No, vaccines do not cause autism.  No, Wi-Fi is not linked to cancer.  No, anti-depressants do not lead to school shootings.  No, pharmaceutical firms are not conspiring to poison children to make money.

During the Black Death, 14th-century Flagellants roamed the streets of continental Europe, whipping themselves in a frenzy of self-mutilation that left them lacerated if not dead.  Their goal was to placate a wrathful God who had breathed down, literally, the poisonous vapors of Plague.  What they did, in fact, was leave behind an infectious stew of blood, tissue, and entrails that brought Plague to local villagers.   Kennedy, Jr. speaks out and showers listeners with verbal effluvia that induces them to forego vaccination and other scientifically grounded safeguards against disease.   Health-wise, he is a Flagellant,  spewing forth misinformation that puts listeners and their children at heightened risk for Covid-19 and  a cluster of infectious diseases long vanquished by vaccine science.

Does Kennedy, Jr. really believe that everything we have learned about the human immune system since the late 18th century is bogus, and that children who once died from smallpox, cholera, yellow fever, diphtheria, pertussis, typhoid, typhus, tetanus, and polio are still dying in droves, now from the vaccines they receive to protect them?   Does he believe the increase in life expectancy in the U.S. from 47 in 1900 to 77 in 2021 has nothing to do with vaccination?   Does he believe that the elimination of smallpox and polio from North America has nothing to do with vaccination?   Does he believe it a fluke of nature that the last yellow fever epidemic in America was in 1905, and that typhoid fever and diphtheria now victimize only unvaccinated American travelers who contract them abroad?

The fact that we have a President comfortably at home in the Galenic world, and an HSS Secretary whose web of delusional beliefs land him in the nether region of the Twilight Zone doesn’t mean the rest of us must follow suit.   We are citizens of the 21st century and entitled to reap the life-sustaining benefits of 250 years of sustained medical progress – progress that has taken us to the doorstep of epical advances in disease prevention, management, and cure wrought by genetic medicine.[18]   My urgent plea is carpe tuum tempus – seize the era in which you live.   Seize the knowledge that medical science has provided.  In a word:  Get all your vaccines and make doubly sure your children get theirs.  Do your part to Make America Sane Again.

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[1] Andrew M. Wehrman, The Contagion of Liberty:  The Politics of Smallpox in the American Revolution.  Baltimore (Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 2022), p. 220.

[2] Dan Liebowitz, “Smallpox Vaccination: An Early Start of Modern Medicine in America, ” J. Community Hosp. Intern. Med. Perspect., 7:61-63, 2017 (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5463674).

[3] Jim Downs, Maladies of Empire:  How Colonialism, Slavery, and War Transformed Medicine  (Cambridge:  Harvard Univ. Press,  2021), pp. 143-145.

[4] Ibid., p. 150.

[5] James Colgrove, Epidemic City: The Politics of Public Health in New York (NY:  Russell Sage Foundation, 2011), pp. 185-187.

[6] Louis Galambos, with Jane Eliot Sewell, Networks of Innovation:  Vaccine Development at Merck, Sharp & Dohme, and Mulford, 1895-1995 (Cambridge:  Cambridge Univ. Press, 1995), pp. 106-107.

[7] Judith Sealander, The Failed Century of the Child:  Governing America’s Young in the Twentieth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 2003), p. 326.

[8] Colgrove, op. cit., pp. 170, 190.

[9] Carol R. Byerly, Mosquito Warrior:  Yellow Fever, Public Health, and the Forgotten Career of General William C. Gorgas (Tuscaloosa: Univ. Alabama Press, 2024), p, 226.

[10] For elaboration, see Paul E. Stepansky, “Vaccinating Across Enemy Lines,”  Medicine, Health, & History, 16 April 2021 (https://adoseofhistory.com/2021/04/16/vaccinating-across-enemy-lines).

[12] Peter J. Hotez, “Vaccine Diplomacy:  Historical Perspective and Future Directions,” PLoS Neglected Trop. Dis. 8:e380810.1371, 2014; Peter J. Hotez, “Russian-United States Vaccine Science: Preserving the Legacy,” PLoS Neglected Trop. Dis., 11:e0005320,2017.

[13] Galombo & Sewell, op. cit., pp. 106-107.

[14] Joseph F. Kett, The Formation of the American Medical Profession:  The Role of Institutions, 1780-1860 (New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1968), p. vii.  I invoke the Jacksonian Dark Age of American medicine in  a different context in  Paul E. Stepansky, Psychoanalysis at the Margins (NY:  Other Press, 2009), pp. 283-285.

[15] Nadav Davidovitch, “Negotiating Dissent:  Homeopathy and Anti-Vaccinationism At the Turn of the Twentieth Century,” in Robert D. Johnston, ed., The Politics of Healing: Histories of Alternative Medicine in Twentieth-Century Medicine (New York:  Routledge, 2004), pp. 23-24.

[16] Paul E. Stepansky, “Covid-19 and Trump’s Medieval Turn of Mind,”  Medicine, Health, and History, 19 August 2020  (https://adoseofhistory.com/?s=Trump%27s+Medieval+turn)

[17]  Marilyn Marchone, “More deaths, no benefit from malaria drug in VA virus study,”  AP News, 21 April 2020 (https://apnews.com/article/malaria-donald-trump-us-news-ap-top-news-virus-outbreak-a5077c7227b8eb8b0dc23423c0bbe2b2).

[18] For a masterful introduction to the history of genetic medicine, including the discovery and applications of CRISPR gene editing, the development of RNA genetic vaccines for Covid-19, and the frontier of genetically engineered disease management, see Walter Issacson, Code Breaker:  Jennifer Doudna , Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race (NY:  Simon & Schuster, 2017).   No less illuminating is Doudna’s own account of her pathway to CRISPR research and evolving understanding of the therapeutic potential of CRISPR-based gene editing, Jennifer A. Doudna & Samuel H. Sternberg, A Crack in Creation:  Gene Editing and the Unthinkable Power to Control Evolution,  esp. chs. 1 & 2  (Boston:  Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2017).  Far more limited in scope but very worthwhile in illustrating contemporary genetic diagnosis and treatment is Am Amgis Ashley, The Genome Odyssey:   Medical Mysteries and the Incredible Quest to Solve Them (Milwaukee:  Porchlight, 2021).

Copyright © 2025 by Paul E. Stepansky. All rights reserved.  The author kindly requests that educators using his blog essays in their courses and seminars let him know via info[at]keynote-books.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Leeches, Maggots, and MAGAs

It’s 1985, and Harvard plastic surgeon Joseph Upton has a problem. The hospital emergency room has sent him a five-year-old boy whose ear has been torn off by a dog. For an experienced  surgeon, reattaching a severed ear is a straightforward matter.  But the reattached ear will have none of it.  It immediately blackens because blood cannot escape it. 

The renaissance in leeching was off and running – uh, sucking.[i]  Leech bites, we now know, not only release an anti-coagulant to prevent clotting, but also a vasodilator.  And to make good matters still better, their chemical broth contains a “spreading factor” that liquifies hardening blood away from the site of reattachment. In this manner, leech secretions establish an “artificial circulation” that keeps a reattached appendage alive while the patient grows new veins.  This is good.[ii]   

A succession of leech-assisted reattachments followed, and in 2004 the FDA approved leeches as a “medical device.”  Earlier that  year, it paid similar homage to the leech’s brother-in- arms, the maggot.

   Ah, the maggot, larva of the blow fly.   It was not a matter only of their secretions, but of their appetites.  By a quirk (or gift) of nature, they were ravenous for human tissue – but only dead or diseased tissue, not healthy tissue.  Maggot therapy goes back to antiquity, with such notable early exponents as Ambrose Paré and Dominique Jean Larrey, Napoleon’s chief surgeon.  During Napoleon’s Egyptian campaign of 1799, he took pains to reassure frightened wounded soldiers  that the swarms of Syria’s blue flies on their wounds, far from being harmful, “shortened the work of Nature” in getting them back on their feet.  During the American Civil War, a group of Confederate medical officers tended gangrenous wounds at a Chattanooga prison absent medical supplies, such as bandages and wrappings; they watched in amazement as maggot-infested uncovered Confederate wounds cleared up quickly. [iii]

But it was William Baer, a Johns Hopkins surgeon, who brought it into the modern age.[iv]  In 1917, as a consulting surgeon to the American Expeditionary Force in France, Baer was brought two wounded soldiers left on the battlefield for a week prior to arrival at a military hospital.  And behold!  To Baer’s amazement, their wounds were not festering with bacteria. Indeed, they were free of any infection or purulence.  In Baer’s own words, the wounds had the  “most beautiful pink granulation tissue that one can imagine.”[v]  And more amazing still, the wounds were swarming with maggots.  

After the war,  Baer returned to his civilian duties at Johns Hopkins, where, at the  suggestion of his mentor, Harvey Cushing, and approved by William Halsted, he founded and directed Hopkins’ orthopedic service.  Beginning in the 1920s, with his wartime experience still fresh, he began treating osteomyelitis (chronic bone infection) with maggot therapy at Baltimore Children’s Hospital.[vi]  His experiments were extremely encouraging, though several of his young patients developed tetanus and two eventually died.  But the problem was readily solvable:  it was a matter of using  sterilized fly larvae.  Henceforth, there was no more tetanus, and persistent infections routinely healed in no more than six weeks.[vii]   Maggot therapy, relying on sterilized larvae, was off and running – uh, ingesting. 

Maggots debriding an open wound.

Maggots at work.  Note the healthy tissue around the periphery of the wound.

  In the 1940s, maggots took an extended leave, replaced on the frontline of infection management by the sulfa drugs and then penicillin.  In cases of drug- resistant infections, however, they were called up and, without fanfare or publicity, did what was asked of them.  In 1976, they briefly reclaimed the spotlight, when maggots were used to clear up the mastoiditis of a 67-year-old man at the University of Texas Health Science Center.[viii]  The resurgence of maggot therapy in recent years encompasses a variety of wounds, including pressure ulcers, diabetic foot ulcers, venous ulcers, necrotizing fasciitis, crush injuries, and burn wounds.[ix]  Aided by dozens of laboratories worldwide, often getting medicinal maggots to those who need them via overnight courier services, maggots are once again on the frontlines, attacking and neutralizing major life-threatening infections.      

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What do MAGA supporters know of America  – its values, its guiding ideals, the political and moral imperatives transposed to paper in Philadelphia in 1787 by the Founding Fathers?  What do they know of American history and its fitful and tragically incomplete journey to liberty and justice for all?  And what do they know of the role of immigrants in that journey, of what they brought to these shores and contributed to the perduring experiment in representative democracy? 

And what do they know of the  “greatness” that can be imputed to nation-states?  Is it simply a matter of sending away immigrants, refugees, and victims of persecution seeking safe haven?  What prototypes of greatness do they have in mind?  Ancient Egypt?  Imperial Rome?  Napoleonic France?  Bismarckian Germany?  Nazi Germany?  Fascist Italy?  Stalinist Russia?  

Since MAGAs seek to make America great “again,” which periods of American history capture the greatness they seek to restore?  And what is it about these historical interludes – these oases of greatness – that made them great?   Does American greatness refer back to the enforced insularity of the  early 20th century, when successive immigration acts of 1917, 1921, and 1924, all suffused with racist disdain for immigrants outside the zone of West European whiteness, kept racial and ethnic undesirables off these shores?   Or do they yearn for the greatness of Depression-era America, free from the governmental tyrannies that came with the New Deal and post-war emergence of the modern welfare state?     

Beyond turning immigrants and refugees away, sending illegals back home, and shearing away layers of social welfare legislation – Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, Obamacare – what exactly do they have in mind?  Perhaps they hearken back to life in the antebellum South, or perhaps to the Jim Crow era that took shape in the 1880s, when racial separatism was codified in race laws so unyielding that they provided an inspiring precedent for the Nazi lawyers who formulated the Nuremberg Laws of 1935 .  Perhaps these laws could be rejuvenated to protect MAGA Americans from ethnic contamination by the dog-eating Haitians who have taken over Springfield. 

No, I’ll take a nation of MAGGOTs any day of the week.  Give me a segmented worm that liquifies and ingests dead and decaying tissue, all the while releasing chemicals that kill bacteria and promote the growth of healthy tissue  —  give me such an insect larva and I’ll give you a facilitator of greatness in the host organism – or nation.  Let us opt for an America guided by a commitment to the promotion of health of whatever diseased organism it happens upon.  The maggot cares not about species membership, only that the object of ingestion is diseased and dead tissue, life-threatening to the living organism. 

Here is a tag that puts MAGA to shame:  Give me a presidential candidate whose supporters rally around the MAGGOT credo:  Make America’s Great Goodness Overcome Tyrants – and tyrants in all their deceptive guises and delusionally pretty packaging.   Between now and the Presidential election of November 5th, let us become MAGGOT AMERICA.   Did you get your cap?


[i] Iain Whitaker, et al., “The Efficacy of Medicinal Leeches in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery: A Systematic Review of 277 Reported Clinical Cases,” Microsurgery, March 2012.   This review of 67 publications reports  on 277 cases of leech use between 1966 and 2009.  It found an overall reported “success” rate following leech therapy of 77.98%, i.e., in 216 or 277 reports.

[ii] John Colapinto,“Bloodsuckers: How the Leech Made a Comeback,” New Yorker, June 25, 2005, 72-81.

[iii] Joel Grossman, “Flies as Medical Allies,”  published in World and I, October 1994, Military and Government Collection.

[iv] M. M. Manring & J. H. Calhoun, “Biographical Sketch: William H. Baer,” Clinical Orthop. Relat. Res., 460:917-919, 2011, and R. E. Lenhard, William Stevenson Baer.  Baltimore: Schneidereith, 1973, 26pp.

[v] W. S. Baer, “The Treatment of Chronic Osteomyelitis with the Maggot (Larva of the Blowfly),” J. Bone Joint Surg. Am., 13:438-475, 1931.

[vi] Milton Wainwright, Miracle Cure: The Story of Penicillin and the Golden Age of Antibiotics.  Oxford: Blackwell, 1990: 110-111.

[vii] Grossman, “Flies as Medical Allies,”  op. cit.  

[viii] Wainwright, Miracle Cure, p. 112.

[ix] Ronald A. Sherman, “Maggot Therapy Takes Us Back to the Future of Wound Care:  New and Improved Maggot Therapy for the 21st Century,” J. Diabetes Sci. Technol., 3:336-344, 2009.

Copyright © 2024 by Paul E. Stepansky.   All rights reserved.  The author kindly requests that educators using his blog essays in their courses and seminars let him know via info[at]keynote-books.com.

An Irony of War

“There are two groups of people in warfare – those organized to inflict and those organized to repair wounds – and there is little doubt but that in all wars, and in this one in particular, the former have been better prepared for their jobs” (Milit. Surg., 38:601, 1916).  So observed Harvey Cushing, the founder of modern neurosurgery, a year before America’s entry into World War I.  Cushing’s judgment is just, and yet throughout history “those organized to repair wounds” have risen to the exigencies  of the war at hand.  In point of fact, warfare has spurred physicians, surgeons, and researchers to major, sometimes spectacular, advances, and their scientific and clinical victories are bequeathed  to civilian populations that inherit the peace.  Out of human destructiveness emerge potent new strategies of protection, remediation, and self-preservation.  Call it an irony of war.

Nor are these medical and surgical gifts limited to the era of modern warfare.  The French army surgeon Jean Louis Petit invented the screw tourniquet in 1718; it made possible leg amputation above the knee.  The Napoleonic Wars of the early nineteenth century brought us the first field hospitals along with battlefield nursing and ambulances.  The latter were of course horse-drawn affairs, but they were exceedingly fast and maneuverable and were termed “flying ambulances.”  The principle of triage — treating the wounded, regardless of rank, according to severity of injury and urgency of need – is not a product of twentieth-century disasters.  It was devised by Dominique Jean Larrey, Napoleon’s surgeon-in-chief from 1797 to 1815.

The American Civil War witnessed the further development of field hospitals and the acceptance, often grudging, especially among southern surgeons, of female nurses tending to savaged male bodies.  Hospital-based training programs for nurses were a product of wartime experience.  Civil War surgeons themselves broached the idea shortly after the peace, and the first such programs opened  in New York, Boston, and New Haven hospitals in 1873.  The dawning appreciation of the relationship between sanitation and prevention of infection, which would blossom into the “sanitary science” of the 1870s and 1880s, was another Civil War legacy.

And then there were the advances, surgical and technological, in amputation.  They included the use of the flexible chain saw to spare nerves and muscles and even, in many cases of comminuted fracture, to avoid amputation entirely.  The development of more or less modern vascular ligation – developed on the battlefield to tie off major arteries extending from the stumps of severed limbs – is another achievement of Civil War surgeons.  Actually, they rediscovered ligation, since the French military surgeon Amboise Paré employed it following battlefield amputation in the mid-sixteenth century, and he in turn was reviving a practice employed in the Alexandrian Era of the fourth century B.C.

In 1900 Karl Landsteiner, a Viennese pathologist and immunologist, first described the ABO system of blood groups, founding the field of immunohematology.  As a result, World War I gave us blood banks that made possible blood transfusions among wounded soldiers in the Army Medical Corps in France.  The First World War also pushed medicine further along the path to modern wound management, including the treatment of cellulitic wound infections, i.e., bacterial skin infections that followed soft tissue trauma.  Battlefield surgeons were quick to appreciate the need for thorough wound debridement and delayed closure in treating contaminated war wounds.  The prevalence of central nervous system injuries – a tragic byproduct of trench warfare in which soldiers’ heads peered anxiously above the parapets  – led to “profound insights into central nervous system form and function.” The British neurologist Gordon Holmes provided elaborate descriptions of spinal transections (crosswise fractures) for every segment of the spinal cord, whereas Cushing, performing eight neurosurgeries a day, “rose to the challenge of refining the treatment of survivors of penetrating head wounds” (Arch. Neurol., 51:712, 1994).  His work from 1917 “lives today” (ANZ J. Surg., 74:75, 2004).

No less momentous was the development of reconstructive surgery by inventive surgeons (led by the New Zealand ENT surgeon Harold Gillies) and dentists (led by the French-American Charles Valadier) unwilling to accept the gross disfigurement of downed pilots who crawled away from smoking wreckages with their lives, but not their faces, intact.  A signal achievement of wartime experience with burn and gunshot victims was Gillies’s Plastic Surgery of the Face of 1920; another was the founding of the American Association of Plastic Surgeons a year later.  After the war, be it noted, the pioneering reconstructive surgeons refused to place their techniques at the disposal of healthy women (and less frequently healthy men) desirous of facial enhancement; reconstructive facial surgery went into short-lived hibernation.  One reason reconstructive surgeons morphed into cosmetic surgeons was the psychiatrization of facial imperfection via Freudian and especially Adlerian notions of the “inferiority complex,” with its allegedly life-deforming ramifications.  So nose jobs became all the rage in the 1930s, to be joined by facelifts in the postwar 40s. (Elizabeth Haiken’s book Venus Envy: A History of Cosmetic Surgery [1997] is illuminating on all these issues.)

The advances of World War II are legion.  Among the most significant was the development or significant improvement of 10 of the 28 vaccine-preventable diseases identified in the twentieth century (J. Pub. Health Pol., 27:38, 2006);  new vaccines for influenza, pneumococcal pneumonia, and plague were among them.   There were also new treatments for malaria and the mass production of penicillin in time for D-Day.  It was during WWII that American scientists learned to separate blood plasma into its constituents (albumin, globulins, and clotting factors), an essential advance in the treatment of shock and control of bleeding.

No less staggering were the surgical advances that occurred during the war. Hugh Cairns, Cushing’s favorite student, developed techniques for the repair of the skull base and laid the foundation of modern craniofacial surgery by bringing together neurosurgeons, plastic surgeons, and ophthalmic surgeons in mobile units referred to as “the trinity.”   There were also major advances in fracture and wound care along with the development of hand surgery as a surgical specialty.   Wartime treatment experience with extreme stress, battlefield trauma, and somatization (then termed, in Freudian parlance, “conversion reactions”) paved the way for the blossoming of psychosomatic medicine in the 1950s and 1960s.

The drum roll hardly ends with World War II.  Korea gave us the first air ambulance service.  Vietnam gave us Huey helicopters for evacuation of wounded soldiers.  (Now all trauma centers have heliports.)  Prior to evacuation, these soldiers received advanced, often life-saving, care from medical corpsmen who opened surgical airways and performed thoracic needle decompressions and shock resuscitation; thus was born our modern system of prehospital emergency care by onsite EMTs and paramedics.  When these corpsmen returned to the States, they formed the original candidate pool for Physician Assistant training programs, the first of which opened its doors at Duke University Medical Center in 1965.  Vietnam also gave us major advances in vascular surgery, recorded for surgical posterity in the “Vietnam Vascular Registry,” a database with records of over 8000 vascular wound cases contributed by over 600 battlefield surgeons.

The medical and surgical yield of recent and ongoing wars in the Persian Gulf will be recorded in years to come.  Already, these wars have provided two advances for which all may give thanks:  portable intensive care units (“Life Support for Trauma and Transport”) and Hem-Con bandages.  The latter, made from extract of shrimp cells, stop severe bleeding instantaneously.

Now, of course, with another century of war under our belt and the ability to play computer-assisted war games, we are better able to envision the horrific possibilities of wars yet to come.  In the years leading up to World War I, American surgeons – even those, like Harvey Cushing, who braced themselves for war – had no idea of the human wreckage they would encounter in French field hospitals.  Their working knowledge of war wounds relied on the Boer War (1899-1900), a distinctly nineteenth-century affair, militarily speaking, fought in the desert of South Africa, not in trenches in the overly fertilized, bacteria-saturated soil of France.  Now military planners can turn to databases that gather together the medical-surgical lessons of two World Wars, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and any number of regional conflicts.

Military simulations have already been broadened to include political and social factors.  But military planners should also be alert to possibilities of mutilation, disfigurement, multiple-organ damage, and drug-resistant infection only dimly imagined.  Perhaps they can broaden their simulations to include the medical and surgical contingencies of future wars and get bench scientists, clinical researchers, and surgeons to work on them right away.  Lucky us.

Copyright © 2012 by Paul E. Stepansky.  All rights reserved.