VOLUNTARY AID DETACHMENTS
... VOLUNTARY AID DETACHMENTS. The Secretary of the War J the number of voluntary aid tered the War Office the detachment, representing «J J 64,212 members, two-thirds These figures show .that J „ has taken place ...
... VOLUNTARY AID DETACHMENTS. The Secretary of the War J the number of voluntary aid tered the War Office the detachment, representing «J J 64,212 members, two-thirds These figures show .that J „ has taken place ...
... shortly to opened a military hospital and is at present being to that The staff and gentlemen from the Northenden Voluntary Aid Detachments. Tho commandant offillr in charge Dr. H. M. Williamson, Palatine-road. ...
... Hoin« Hospital Reserves. ±iome Six hundref from the reserve comnamVa joined the expeditionary force the r AMP The voluntary aid detachments >' i *» ...
... TO HELP THE WOUNDED. The Voluntary Aid Detachments of the British Crust nave lately made great progress in East Lancashire. The V.A.D.'S., as they are popularly called. are the direct result of the magnificent work of Florence Nightingale and her devutecl ...
... this country 30,000 patients were arranged for in the course of 48 hours. From that time on hospitals staffed by voluntary aid detachments have been in active operation all over the country, and at the present moment the society has on its list some 705 ...
... hospitals for the present, with two officers and fire men each, but he hoped they would prove centres to which the voluntary aid detachments could turn fur guidance and help. ...
... of medical attention unless the professional medical service was supplementecf by efficient voluntary assistance. There ought to be voluntary aid detachments in every town and district. In Cheshire they were getting on. A time might come to the members ...
... Society, and the Cheshire brancii has been requested from headquarters to form voluntary aid detachments for transport service only. It has been suggested that transport detachments should be formed at Chester, Birkenhead, Stockport (with sections at Bramhall ...
... Nursing Service, Regular, Reserve, and Territorial Forces, Queen Alexandra's Nursing Service for India, and members of Voluntary Aid Detachments who have quitted the service under the above conditions; also to civil practitioners and to other civilians who, ...
... officers, 130 men,’ and twenty-one nurses of the Territorial Nursing Service. The British Red Cross Society and the Voluntary Aid Detachments are also preparing for the help of wounded soldiers, a scheme which can only he rendered efficient by the sympathy ...
... associations in forming, registering, training, administering and controlling voluntary aid detachments, and to make suggestions for amending existing schemes for organisation voluntary aid with view the removal such difficulties. The ...
... AERIAL BOMB PERIL NURSES PREPARING FOR EMERGENCIES. WOUNDED BOY SCOUTS. An interesting glimpse of the work which voluntary aid detachments would be called upon to were hostile aeroplanes to fly over the country and scatter death and destruction was afforded ...