Medical Care and Hospitals During the Civil War The Civil War started on April 12, 1861 and ended April 9, 1863. Many soldiers died for many different reasons. About 750,000 soldiers died during the Civil War because of medical causes. Most deaths were caused by diseases from bullet wounds and other injuries. Two thirds of 620,000 soldiers who died were not because of enemy fire but instead because of disease. In the union and confederate armies there were roughly over 2.8 million soldiers (men and women) who served in the Civil war. There were many new hospitals and medical centers built before and after the civil war started. The only hospital before the war started in Washington, DC was a two story building with six rooms which they …show more content…
Many of the diseases that the soldiers got came from bullet wounds and infections from all different kinds of wounds. During the war a common disease was smallpox. A lot of disease-related deaths were because of poor sanitation because the sterile technique was not seen as important yet.
There was quite a decrease in the population during the Civil War. Sadly two percent of the population died during the conflict of the Civil War. There were many soldiers in the war. There were about 2.8 million men who served in the war but there were only a few hundred women in the conflict.
Hospitals and
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The quality of physical exams improved with the Civil War Military Draft Act of 1863, when fines and prison sentences were put in place for physicians who were derelict in their duties. There were many regulations for physical exams. One of the regulations which were put in place was an Army regulation 1297 set out criteria for pre induction physical exams. Medical school was also two years in duration along with some other years of you want to go deeper into the medical field.
Medicine involving quinine and