Nearly two-thirds of the Civil War's approximately 750,000
fatalities were caused by disease--a staggering fact for which the
American medical profession was profoundly unprepared. In the years
before the war, training for physicians in the United States was
mostly unregulated, and medical schools' access to cadavers for
teaching purposes was highly restricted. Shauna Devine argues that
in spite of these limitations, Union army physicians rose to the
challenges of the war, undertaking methods of study and
experimentation that would have a lasting influence on the
scientific practice of medicine.
Though the war's human toll was tragic, conducting postmortems on
the dead and caring for the wounded gave physicians ample
opportunity to study and develop new methods of treatment and
analysis, from dissection and microscopy to new research into
infectious disease processes. Examining the work of doctors who
served in the Union Medical Department, Devine sheds new light on
how their innovations in the midst of crisis transformed northern
medical education and gave rise to the healing power of modern
health science.