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  Vol. 139 No. 6, June 2004 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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  Moments in Surgical History
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George Crile, Harvey Cushing, and the Ambulance Américaine

Military Medical Preparedness in World War I

Eric I. Rutkow, BA; Ira M. Rutkow, MD, MPH, DrPH

Arch Surg. 2004;139:678-685.


ABSTRACT

In a little-remembered episode of American surgical history, more than 2 years before the nation's formal entry into World War I in April 1917, teams of surgeons and their support personnel had already been deployed in France. The surgeons' service at the Ambulance Américaine in Paris and at other smaller hospital facilities in the French countryside brought about the efficient integration of civilian American medicine into World War I's military structure. Under the leadership of George Crile and Harvey Cushing, this early American surgical presence in France created remarkable organizational and scientific advances in military medicine and prepared the United States to go to war.








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