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War Story of the Canadian Army Medical Corps.

JAMA. 1919;72(15):1100. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610150058036.
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ABSTRACT

Dr. Adami needs no introduction to the medical profession as a writer either on scientific or on literary subjects. He wields a trenchant pen and guides it with a carefully accurate, far-seeing mind. In this instance, he approaches his subject with deep personal sympathy and feeling; the Canadian Army Medical Corps is fortunate in its present historian. This first volume concerns the rise of the C. A. M. C., its assembly, the second battle of Ypres, with the introduction of poison gas, and the establishment of hospital units in France, and other medical units on the line of communication. The next volume is to take up the work of the sanitary section of the first Canadian division, and continue the history of the Canadian Army Medical Corps during 1916. The story is enlivened by many personal notes from the diaries of officers intimately connected with the work. Numerous well drawn

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