Make no mistake your just as likely to die today from an infection!
Well if you take all types of infection, that might be true, but even then that statement is doubtful.
:hmm:
Topical, triple antibiotic ointments, couple with oral and intravenous antibiotics has greatly reduced the chance of death from infection from a mere flesh wound, which is what we're focused upon.
People today don't regularly die of "blood poisoning", and cellulitis from a person scratching skin reacting to poison ivy can be cured without much actual threat to the patient, when in colonial times both could be quite fatal. I had to take two of my brother Marine Officers to the sick bay and leave them overnight with poison ivy cellulitis in the 1980's (city fellers :shake
While people often develop an excellent resistance to the bacteria where they were born, and in the past folks often lived entire lives within 20 miles of the location where they were born, travelling twice that distance or farther, and you have a different set of potential pathogens that you bring to into the area for the folks that live there, as well as are waiting for you when you arrive. :wink: Evidence of this is found when examining remains from Ancient Egypt where skull surgery was performed and the bone healing indicated the person survived, as well as from similar surgery preformed in African jungle areas, where the patient is alive and well today. Not to mention the evidence of diseases left behind by passing armies of men, not from the local area, where the army bivouacked, and yet the army itself staying relatively healthy..., or sometimes not. :shocked2:
Spence10 wrote:
so I never understood how you were supposed to get a cut on the back.
I've only seen one guy in more than 20 years get a cut on his back from a 'hawk. He fell off a fort wall and landed on his back. NOW I have seen folks wearing the hawk in their sash behind the back, sit, or otherwise hit the handle of the 'hawk, which moved it from the center of the back toward their left side, or they simply carried it more on their left, rear hip than centered. Then when reaching backwards to the bare blade, they've cut their hand pretty good.
LD