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      The earliest days of first aid.

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      BMJ (Clinical research ed.)

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          Abstract

          First aid, as a profession in its own right, has a history of only 120 years. It evolved from the teachings of the Royal Humane Society and military surgeons, who saw the wisdom of training in splinting and bandaging for battlefield wounds. In 1878 two Aberdeenshire military officers, Surgeon-Major Peter Shepherd of the Royal Herbert Military Hospital, Woolwich, London, and Colonel Francis Duncan established the concept of teaching first aid skills to civilians. This radical new enterprise, conducted under the auspices of the newly formed St John Ambulance Association, was a natural evolution from the body's philanthropic and ambulance transport work. Shepherd conducted the first class in the hall of the Presbyterian school in Woolwich using a comprehensive first aid curriculum that he had developed. Within months of that first class, local Woolwich civilians used their skills when the pleasure boat Princess Alice sank in the Thames at Woolwich, killing 600 people. Within a decade, the new discipline of first aid spread rapidly throughout the world, and by the end of the 19th century, hundreds of thousands of St John first aid certificates had been awarded in four continents. Shepherd's pioneering classes changed the world's concept of the need for the provision of skilled prehospital care.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          BMJ
          BMJ (Clinical research ed.)
          0959-8138
          0959-535X
          December 24 1994
          : 309
          : 6970
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Child Health, Royal Children's Hospital, Herston Old, Australia.
          Article
          10.1136/bmj.309.6970.1718
          2542683
          7820000
          729b07cc-14fa-4778-b909-c429196df412
          History

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