Interviewer: One of those stations that you were at...
Well we would preform normal military
duties like we, we didn't drill of course,
in a station like that, but we would get
the troops up at regular times and
have our meals and carry out any
whatever paperwork was necessary and
then we would receive casualties,
whenever they occurred. And at that,
those units, even those far forward,
we had a helicopter landing pad,
a landing area I should say,
it wasn't a formal pad.
And if we received word by radio that
casualties were coming in by helicopter,
we put out a Red Cross symbol
on the ground. And helicopters, little Bell
helicopters which carried only one or
two stretchers outside of the cabin
on the bottom. And they would fly in and
drop them there. And they'd wait til we
sort of did a triage, which was an
evaluation situation. The triage system,
is essentially taking quick look at wounded
and you decide that at one level,
this man isn't going to survive.
At the other level, this man has got a
few scratches and he just needs
some simple treatment.
And in between are the more severally wounded,
who will much more, a lot more attention.
I'm not implying that you would completely
abandon the man you knew that was going
to not survive. You had to prioritize the,
the way you treated them.
And if they were sufficiently injured,
that it was better for them to be
attended in a Mash hospital, for instance,
or further back, we'd evacuate them by
the same helicopter sometimes.
If however, they were such that we felt,
we could do some immediate treatment and
get them prepared to go further back,
probably by land ambulance,
we would do that. We would take them
in to the tents briefly and patch them up
a little bit and get them ready for travel on,
on the land. Land ambulances travel fairly
far forward, of course as you realize.
And then the helicopters even further forward.
So if a man was severely injured in his unit,
they would radio for a helicopter and within
about 15 minutes, they would have a
helicopter on the ground,
who would pick up the wounded.
And the regimental medical officer would
send them, where he thought it was appropriate.
He might even bypass the casualty
collecting post, if he felt it was absolutely
essential that the man get to more
sophisticated treatment quicker.
If we landed, tried to land helicopters
at night, we would, we'd set up flares.
So, the man could get a half decent
crack at landing, you see.
Again, we would put out the panels,
so the flares would illuminate a small
section of ground with the Red Cross,
made by panels, in the centre and . . .
Most of, most of the evacuations seemed
to occur in the, in the daylight hours.
I suppose that was a matter of
convenience at the front, you know.
They would have to go forward and pick up
casualties and they could do that better in
the daylight hours, than they could
sometimes at night, but, but they
occurred both night and day.
I guess, I was, one of the things I felt
about it though that if you were going to
have wars, you should, you should conduct
them in a way that minimizes the loss,
all sorts of loss. Not just the loss of life,
but the loss of limbs and eyes and
so on, you know. And the, the way we
handled the situation medically,
I think, did, did that.
You know by evacuating people quickly
from the front, we were able to save limbs,
we were able to save lives,
of course many times too.
But limbs was really something quite interesting,
because while the man might limp,
he had a leg to limp with.
Whereas even in the early part of World War II,
they were amputated because there was
just no hope of saving them, you see,
they couldn't get to the front as quickly and
couldn't evacuate them as quickly.