The Influence of the Two World Wars on the Development of Rehabilitation for Spinal Cord Injuries in the United States and Great Britain.

D. Lanska
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

During World War I, physical and occupational therapies became important adjuncts to surgical practice, particularly for orthopedic casualties, but there was little progress in the management of severe brain and spinal cord injuries (SCIs), largely because of the very high mortality of such injuries at that time. During World War II (WWII), rehabilitation was greatly expanded into an integrated, comprehensive multidisciplinary program in the U.S. military, largely because of the efforts of Howard Rusk (1901-1989), initially in the Army Air Corps and later across all of the services. With Bernard Baruch's (1870-1965) assistance, Rusk was also successful in swaying President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882-1945) to support rehabilitation for injured veterans and to give official standing to rehabilitation medicine in the military and the Veterans Administration after WWII. Such WWII developments in rehabilitation medicine had a profound effect on the care, functional outcomes, and survival of veterans with SCIs. Neurosurgeon Donald Munro's (1898-1978) prototype SCI unit at Boston City Hospital in 1936 influenced the U.S. Army to establish several SCI centers during WWII and influenced urologist Ernest Bors (1900-1990) to pioneer SCI care in Veterans Administration medical centers after WWII. In Britain, the organizational leadership of George Riddoch (1888-1947) led to the development of SCI units that saw their greatest development by Ludwig Guttmann (1899-1980) at Stoke-Mandeville Hospital in Aylesbury, near London. These SCI centers provided a comprehensive spectrum of care, including medical, neurological, and surgical management; psychological counseling; and rehabilitation focused on improving self-care, mobility, and re-assimilation into society. After WWII, military developments in comprehensive rehabilitation were promulgated to and developed in the revitalized Veterans Administration and then disseminated to civilian populations.
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两次世界大战对美国和英国脊髓损伤康复发展的影响
在第一次世界大战期间,物理和职业疗法成为外科手术的重要辅助手段,特别是对于骨科伤员,但在严重脑和脊髓损伤(SCIs)的治疗方面几乎没有进展,主要是因为当时这种损伤的死亡率很高。在第二次世界大战(二战)期间,康复在美国军队中被极大地扩展为一个综合的,全面的多学科项目,主要是因为霍华德·鲁斯克(1901-1989)的努力,最初是在陆军航空队,后来遍及所有的服务。在伯纳德·巴鲁克(1870-1965)的帮助下,鲁斯克还成功地说服了富兰克林·德拉诺·罗斯福总统(1882-1945)支持受伤退伍军人的康复,并在二战后在军队和退伍军人管理局给予康复医学官方地位。二战后康复医学的发展对SCIs退伍军人的护理、功能结局和生存产生了深远的影响。1936年,神经外科医生Donald Munro(1898-1978)在波士顿城市医院的脊髓损伤原型单元影响了美国陆军在二战期间建立了几个脊髓损伤中心,并影响了泌尿科医生Ernest Bors(1900-1990)在二战后在退伍军人管理局医疗中心率先开展脊髓损伤护理。在英国,George Riddoch(1888-1947)的组织领导推动了脊髓损伤病房的发展,在伦敦附近艾尔斯伯里的Stoke-Mandeville医院的Ludwig Guttmann(1899-1980)期间,脊髓损伤病房得到了最大的发展。这些脊髓损伤中心提供全面的护理,包括医学、神经学和外科管理;心理咨询;康复的重点是提高自我保健、活动能力和重新融入社会。第二次世界大战后,综合康复方面的军事发展在重新焕发活力的退伍军人管理局得到宣传和发展,然后传播给平民。
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Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience
Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
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期刊介绍: Focusing on topics in the fields of both Neurosciences and Neurology, this series provides current and unique information in basic and clinical advances on the nervous system and its disorders.
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