Prompt and Utter Destruction: the Nagasaki Disaster and the Initial Medical Relief

Author(s)
Kosuge, N.
Publication language
English
Pages
25pp
Date published
01 Jun 2007
Publisher
International Review of the Red Cross
Type
Articles
Keywords
Disaster preparedness, resilience and risk reduction, Response and recovery
Countries
Japan

The article takes an overall look at the initial medical relief activities in Nagasaki
after the atomic bomb fell there on 9 August 1945. In Nagasaki, as in Hiroshima,
medical facilities were instantaneously destroyed by the explosion, yet the surviving
doctors and other medical staff, though themselves sometimes seriously injured, did
their best to help the victims. Medical facilities in adjacent areas also tended to the
wounded continuously being brought there; some relief workers arrived at the disaster
area when the level of radiation was still dangerously high. This article will in
particular highlight the work of the doctors.