British Journal of Anaesthesia, Vol 75, Issue 3 366-368, Copyright © 1995 by The Board of Management and Trustees of the British Journal of Anaesthesia
F. E. Bennetts
A wartime embargo on casualty figures and an imprecise contemporary
editorial contributed to the persisting belief that a grossly excessive
mortality rate from barbiturate anaesthesia for surgery of the injured
occurred after the Japanese attack on the American bases in Hawaii in
December 1941. From accounts by surgical staff and official hospital
records which have become available through US Freedom of Information
legislation, it is clear that the rumoured death rate from this cause has
been greatly exaggerated.
HISTORY
Thiopentone anaesthesia at Pearl Harbor
Montrose, 30 Rothesay Drive, Highcliffe on Sea Christchurch, Dorset BH23 4LB
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