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Distinguished Military Unit: MASH 8055th

In stark contrast with the mission of combat forces, the US Army Medical Corps is committed to providing aid and comfort to the injured: wounded soldiers, civilians, and at times even enemy personnel. There are no medals, no glory, and heroism is measured in blood, sweat, and tears. Though the Korean War has been regarded as a failure by many because of its indecisive outcomes, in one area, it was an unbridled success-saving lives. When the war broke out in Korea on June 25, 1950, only two hundred doctors were in the entire Far East Command (Japan, Guam, the Philippines, and Korea). To ensure combat medical services, Congress quickly passed the Doctors Draft Act, requiring all doctors under the age of fifty-one to register for military service. As a result, ninety percent of all staff doctors in Korea were draftees, displaying a more relaxed attitude about Army rules, regulations, and discipline. At this same time, the Army authorized new medical procedures and deployed groundbreaking methods for transport and treatment of the injured, effectively reinventing combat care. One such development was the Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (MASH), popularized by Dr. H. Richard Hornberger, in his 1968 best-selling book (MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors), subsequent movie, and television series based on his real-life experience with the MASH 8055th.

In World War II, the fatality rate for seriously wounded soldiers was 4.5 percent. In the Korean War, that number was cut almost in half, to 2.5 percent. That success is attributed to a combination of the Mobile Army Surgical Hospital, or MASH unit, and the aeromedical evacuation system comprised of the casualty evacuation (casevac) and medical evacuation (medevac) helicopters. Comprised of a series of tents and buildings that could be easily relocated as the front lines moved, the MASH units moved with them to keep the units as close to the front as possible. To accomplish this, accommodations were stark, with operating tables formed by a stretcher balanced across two sawhorses. In past conflicts, wounded soldiers often had to wait hours to be treated, but thanks to the MASH units and the helicopters that brought in the wounded, the wait time was reduced to minutes. As the centerpiece of the Army's medical innovations, these mobile units were fully self-contained, working hospitals, first conceived in 1945 at the close of World War II and the brainchild of Dr. Michael DeBakey. Aside from the constant stress of warfare and long hours in surgery, the units usually picked up and moved at least once a month, which came to be known as “bugging out." Specifically, standards for a MASH required that it was disassembled, loaded onto vehicles, and ready to depart on a six-hour notice. After arrival at its new destination, it was operational within four hours.

In Korea, US soldiers wounded at the battlefront were first attended to on-site by medics and doctors attached to their unit. If the injuries were severe, the men were then evacuated to a MASH unit for surgery and recovery. If warranted, the soldiers were evacuated to a larger hospital for treatment and, if very serious, sent home from there. Initially limited to 60 beds to focus on mobility, with only seven MASH units in Korea (8054th, 8055th, 8063rd, 8076th, 8209th, 8225th, and 8228th), the hospitals were often overwhelmed with wounded and enlarged to 150 beds in November 1950, and again in May 1951 to 200. With the Doctor's Draft Act of 1950, the timing of this expansion worked well for draftees that began to arrive in January 1951.

Similarly, about 540 nurses served tours of duty on the Korean peninsula. Though women weren't allowed on the front lines in combat roles, these nurses served close to the front lines and sometimes in the line of fire. In fact, by the end of the war, Army nurses had received 9 Legions of Merit, 120 Bronze Stars, and 173 Commendation Ribbons.

Much like MASH units, in the early 1950s, the helicopter was still in its infancy. A few made an appearance in the last days of World War II, but now they would be tested on the front lines in Korea. The helicopters carried no guns; they were equipped only with exterior pods and stretchers to extract wounded from the battlefield. They were fragile, high-maintenance aircraft with limited range. The early models had no radio or instrument lights in their cockpits. They couldn't operate in bad weather, were limited on where they could land and were fatally vulnerable to enemy ground fire. In January 1951, four aeromedical evacuation helicopter detachments arrived in Korea, medevacs that would transport more than 20,000 casualties during the war, with one pilot (1st Lt. Joseph L. Bowler) setting a record of 824 medical evacuations over a 10-month period. Perhaps a measure of the helicopter's impact is evident with the successful evacuation of 750 critically wounded soldiers in one day, Feb. 20, 1951, half of whom would have died, according to one surgeon, if only ground transportation had been used. Once the choppers arrived with their wounded, the medical teams unloaded the patients and prepared them for surgery. “There were times when the medical personnel were overloaded, so the pilots would help bring in the wounded and even help the doctors with instruments from time to time."

Richard Kirkland had always wanted to fly, a dream he'd had since he was a young boy. During World War II, he enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Corps and was about to deploy as a member of the 3rd Rescue Squadron flying helicopters. On one of his first nights in Korea, he was introduced to many of the doctors and nurses of the MASH 8055th. There Richard was befriended by two men who would later be commemorated in print and inspire generations through film and television. “One of the surgeons shook hands, saying, ‘They call me Hawkeye- welcome to MASH. The M stands for mud." This, of course, was Dr. Hornberger, who later wrote about his experience with the 8055th under the pen name Richard Hooker. A second tent mate, Capt. Michael Johnson was the basis for the character Trapper John. In Korea, Hornberger pioneered a kind of surgery that was prohibited during the war. “Hornberger possessed the courage and audacity to attempt arterial repair when it was forbidden, and by one account, he may have been the first." Despite the rules and encouraged by early success, with the routine use of vascular surgery during the Korean War, doctors reduced the amputation rate resulting from vascular injury to 20.5 percent from 49.6 percent during World War II.

In a broad sense, with MASH units in place, the Korean War provided an opportunity to study and test new equipment and procedures, many of which would become standards of care in both military and civilian medicine; vascular reconstruction, artificial kidneys, improved cold weather treatments, the newest antibiotics, and other drugs (anticoagulant heparin, sedative Nembutal, serum albumin and whole blood to treat shock) that advanced medical care. In addition, computerized data collection (in the form of computer punch cards) and the use of plastic bags for the transport and handling of blood- a method later adopted around the world and still used today.
  
Life in a MASH unit varied greatly between boredom and endless hours of surgery due to overwhelming casualties. During a “push" (offensive front-line action), the wounded streamed into the operating room for days. Otto Apel, a MASH doctor, remembers, "Seventy-two hours after I had arrived at MASH 8076, I had lost the sense of feeling in my feet. I do not think I had spoken to anyone ... for at least twelve hours." Dr. Apel, it turned out, had performed non-stop surgeries for eighty hours upon his arrival. Harold Secor, a surgeon for the 8055th, recalls that staffing was lean, perhaps thirty corpsmen, ten doctors, ten nurses, one dentist, two service corps officers, and about thirty Koreans. Compounding matters was the units' proximity to the front line. The 8055th was generally four to five miles behind the front lines, and according to Dr. Secor, "If they pulled back very far, we were on the enemy side; that happened at least once.  We had a minefield in our front yard.  There was always some danger, even from our own artillery firing over us.  We had sandbags around the patient tents to stop stray bullets".  Secor remembered that one day, "a bullet zinged into the mess tent, hit a post, and splashed into a cup of coffee." He said, "This was one of the accepted things that it didn't pay to dwell on."

Harold Selly was an Army medic, part of a forward collecting station team. “We were always in danger of being attacked or overrun by the enemy, shelled by artillery and mortars, and grenades thrown into the station," he recalled.

As United Nations (U.N.) troops crossed the 38th parallel and advanced north in the fall of 1950, they encountered a civilian population decimated by epidemics of typhus, smallpox, and typhoid. In addition, captured North Korean and later Chinese troops were ill with these and other contagious diseases. But most troubling was mentions of men turning black as they died, suggesting bubonic plague - the Black Death - was in Korea. But as it turned out, the plague was actually a virulent form of smallpox known as hemorrhagic smallpox. As a result, the 8228th MASH was established for the sole purpose of eradicating these diseases among enemy and civilian populations.

By late 1951, the front line stopped moving and, for the most part, remained in place until the war was over in 1953, negating the need for hospital mobility. Accordingly, the MASH units were replaced with smaller, more efficient combat surgical hospitals (CSH) and forward surgical teams (FST). At the turn of the twenty-first century, there was only one MASH unit left in the world, in Albania, the last to be deactivated in February 2006. Nonetheless, MASH units and the helicopter evacuations developed during the Korean War became the standard for operations in Vietnam and later Operation Iraqi Freedom. The visionary surgeon and inventor Dr. Debakey went on to become renowned for pioneering developments, including coronary bypass operations, carotid endarterectomy, artificial hearts, and ventricular assist devices, grafts to replace or repair blood vessels, and surgical repairs of aortic aneurysms, receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the National Medal of Science, and the Congressional Gold Medal. Despite this acclaim, perhaps the most remarkable contribution centered on a brief and often forgotten moment in time, in a faraway land, where citizen surgeons and nurses gathered to defend freedom, advance medical science, and risk everything to save lives.