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  1. Outbreak of World War l. Between 1916 –1917 Canadian Army Major Lawrence Bruce Robertson, introduced a new syringe-cannula technique for performing direct donor to patient transfusion of unmatched blood saving the lives of many casualties.

  2. Aug 20, 2015 · At the start of the First World War blood transfusion technology was largely untested and not widely accepted. Blood types had first been identified at the turn of the century, but where...

  3. Jul 29, 2024 · Buildings throughout Britain were requisitioned for medical use during WWI. The photo below, part of a series recording the contribution of Indian soldiers to the Allied war effort, provides an example of this. It depicts The Dome Hospital in Brighton, which had 680 beds for wounded soldiers.

  4. Jun 25, 2019 · The first case sheet explains that he was evacuated home to the UK and admitted to East Leeds War Hospital on the 2 July 1916, having received a gunshot wound to the right side of the chest when...

  5. 850 mL Dextrose Dextrose Separately. Citrate. Dextrose. 2000 mL Winchester Bottle. “short and wide rather than tall and narrow”. Original “Robertson Bottle” was 1L, with citrate Blood transfused immediately. After Collecting Blood: Settle for 4-5 days. Draw off supernatant fluid just prior to transfusion.

  6. Jan 14, 2015 · This review explores the historical setting behind the development of blood transfusion up to the start of the First World War and on how they progressed during the war and afterwards. A fresh look may renew interest in how a novel medical speciality responded to the needs of war and of post‐war society.

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