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Hervey Allen abruptly ended his World War I memoir Toward the Flame in the middle of a battle because, as he later wrote, he believed that “When the fighting ends the story stops.” Yet many writers have chosen another route, following wounded soldiers through the grueling and sometimes traumatic process of medical care. Other writers approach war writing through medicine, treating medical professionals as essential to the war effort and thus subjects for a war story. Indeed, medical care often advances greatly during war, creating the irony that destruction of bodies can lead to innovations that save future lives. This essay discusses representations of injured bodies and medical care from the Civil War through the wars in Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan.
To study the rate of prehospital mortality before establishment of a rescue system for victims of land-mines in Iran.
Method:
Survey at rural clinics in mine-affected areas, and retrospective review of public patient records.
Results:
A total of 36.4% of casualties from land-mines in the study area died during the period of 1989–1999. The mortality seems highest in those victims who were torso injured.
Conclusion:
The mortality rate from accidents involving land-mines in the study area was high. Most fatalities seemingly occurred in the prehospital setting.
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