You think there was any shortage of men to provide medical aid?
There was a shortage of men willing to. The armies had surgeons, but not much in the way of long term care if you lost a limb or were otherwise put out of the fight.
My oh my, how did armies survive without female nurses over the last few thousand years?
As in how did the casualties survive? They didn't. A lot of them died of treatable wounds.
Don't compare apples to oranges. I don't know if you're explicitly meaning this, but I get the impression you're implying that, say, Ancient Romans died of wounds that could have been tended by modern medicine that didn't exist then. Do you think they'd have done any better with female nurses?
I was talking more of the 18th/19th century. There just wasn't a lot of resources put into caring for wounded soldiers, it was expected that if they were wounded beyond the ability to fight they'd be paid off and fall back on their family/parish.
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