Ian Campbell Taylor
MRPharmS
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From time to
time, older pharmacists have put pen to paper to
describe their military service experiences at
the beginning of their careers in conditions
vastly different from today. Most of us who did
National Service in the 1940s and '50s were
often posted to stations all over the world, for
the Empire was only just commencing to break up
and garrisons were still maintained in far-flung
places. |
View from Aden Protectorate Levies hospital,
looking across Khormaksar towards Crater in the
background |
Pharmacist friends during this period had been posted to
Cyprus, the West Indies, Nairobi, Singapore, Hong Kong,
NATO headquarters in Paris, and Cairo, and there were
usually opportunities to be posted to the military bases
in the United Kingdom and Germany. Imagine my chagrin
when I learned that I was going to be sent to Aden, a
place regarded as one of the hottest and most
uncomfortable on this earth. After spending two months
at the Royal Air Force school of dispensing at Warton, I
could look forward to about 16 months in Aden.
Mostly desert
Aden is a
port at the southern end of the Red Sea. It is situated
on a coastal plain which is mostly desert. The town is
built around the base of an extinct volcano which rises
about 600 feet and thus provides a sheltered anchorage.
This became strategically important after the opening of
the Suez Canal in 1868 and the European push to colonise
Africa. Aden became a fortified refuelling port which
protected the seaway to the Indian Empire and the Far
East.
From about
1880 until 1960, it was well used: most ships and liners
called to refuel and to allow their passengers to
indulge in the wonderful duty free shopping. Steamer
Point, the dock area, was frantically busy, shops
staying open all the time ships were in port. The
Yemenis who worked in the docks, shops and military
camps lived in the nearby townships of Sheikh Othman and
Crater (made famous by "Mad Mitch" during the liberation
fighting).
Aden was administered by India
until 1948 when it was administered from London. By 1960
there was a decline in port activity as air travel
became more popular and a struggle for liberation
developed resulting in the creation of the People's
Republic of South Yemen in 1967. The new regime was
communist inspired and influence shifted from London to
Moscow.
I last visited Aden in 1974. By
then there were no cruise ships, most of the shops in
Steamer Point were boarded up, and the economy was at a
low level.
The
military presence in Aden was necessary to protect the
port from land and sea attack. The land area stretched
600 miles eastwards along the coast to Oman and
northwards into the empty quarter of Saudi Arabia. Near
Aden, though, the land border with North Yemen was only
60 miles away. This wild, mountainous country was the
Aden Protectorate. There were many tribes owing
allegiance to their sheikh. From time to time they would
fight each other or make raids on the settlements. The
British maintained forces to prevent these skirmishes
upsetting the imperial lines of communication.
In the
1950s, the RAF had a major base at Khormaksar, four
miles from Steamer Point. This was also a civil airport
and a staging post for flights to the East, soon to be
usurped by the airports in the Gulf.
The RAF
also staffed a hospital at Steamer Point, which provided
medical facilities for servicemen, their families,
tourists and the expatriate population.
This preamble explains why in the 1950s there were
postings for four or five pharmacists in Aden, one at
Steamer Point, two or three at the main medical stores
at Maalla and one at the Aden
Protectorate Levies hospital (ALH) near Khormaksar.
These posts were filled by National Servicemen who would
have come from Warton and be placed in charge of a busy
section. It was a heavy responsibility for a young man
filling his first managerial post.
My Posting
I was posted to the main hospital at Steamer Point.
The dispensary provided medicines to the wards and a
small amount of outpatient dispensing. The hospital had
about 180 inpatient beds and was a base hospital serving
all the British service personnel in Aden. The
dispensary was small and situated on the first floor
overlooking the sea - pleasant conditions, in spite of
the weekly inspection by the hospital commander.
Particular note was taken of the Controlled Drugs, which
had to balance with the amount shown in the register.
Most National Service pharmacists would be sergeants by
the end of their two years. They would spend most of
their time as corporals. With this rank you were
expected to take a turn as duty NCO. At the hospital,
this was usually an evening stint dealing with
non-clinical matters, organising responses to emergency
calls, transport for discharged patients and fetching of
urgent supplies. There were often accidents in the port
involving tourists or service personnel, for which
ambulances or transport would have to be sent.
We were sometimes able to go swimming, which was
restricted to beaches protected by shark netting. At
cooler times, early in the morning, we were able to walk
round the rim of the crater, enjoying the magnificent
views.
After two months I was posted to ALH, where I found
myself in charge of medical supplies at the hospital.
The dispensary was responsible for supplying medicines
to inpatients and outpatients of the hospital and to 13
outposts in the Aden Protectorate. The
Levies (levied soldiers) were locally recruited, the
active strength being about 1,500 men. Medical cover was
given to the families and to former serving members,
about 10,000 people in all. It was a real perk, for it
was free; at that time, the rest of the population had
to contribute to their medical costs. The
Levies had a small camel corps and
a few horses, which were used up country in areas
inaccessible to motor transport. We also provided the
veterinary medicines to this unit.
General Hospital
ALH was a general hospital administered by the RAF.
There were about 160 beds, including a section for women
from which we men were banned. The hospital was
commanded by an RAF doctor assisted by two warrant
officers, and administration and supplies staff. Medical
cover was provided by three RAF doctors and a surgeon.
These were assisted at busy times by local GPs. The
other RAF personnel were two male nurses, two laboratory
technicians and myself. Local people made up the rest of
the staff and all of them would have been trained on
site.
The dispensary was staffed by myself and two
assistant dispensers, both of whom spoke English and had
passed a trade test. The dispensary consisted of a large
room with a small store room nearby. Equipment was
sparse: a refrigerator, a water deioniser, a still and a
good range of pots and pans. The work was busy and
intense during the popular outpatient sessions. All
liquids and ointments were made in the dispensary from
raw materials obtained from central medical stores. Our
budget did allow for a few items to be purchased locally
if out of stock at the CMS. The formulary, built up by
my predecessors, consisted of not more than 30 items.
Severe pain was controlled by parenteral and oral
forms of morphine. Aspirin or APC tablets were the only
alternative. Large quantities of these tablets were sent
to the outposts. Muscle pains were treated with rubefacients mainly based on methyl salicylate. Skin
problems were frequent, infections being treated with
gentian violet solution, and wounds with merthiolate or
sulphanilamide powder. Zinc ointment was also frequently
used for minor skin infections. Dry skin conditions
needed oily or aqueous cream. Systemic infections were
treated with sulphonamides, and when tuberculosis was
diagnosed streptomycin was given.
Influenza, colds and bronchitis were common, in spite of
the average daily shade temperature of 35C. Large
quantities of mist expect and mist pot iod ammon were
made, along with codeine linctus. Oral rehydration
therapy had not come into vogue, so tummy troubles were
treated with kaolin and morphine mixture or kaolin
mixture for children.
Malaria was common. Both Paludrine and mepacrine were
use for prophylaxis and treatment. Leprosy was also
common. Although we stocked dapsone, it did not seem
effective and most patients were sent to an isolation
hospital in Sheik Othman.
Most of the patients were illiterate, certainly in
English and probably in Arabic. This threw up the
problem of ensuring that patients understood how to take
or use their medicines. The dispensing staff ensured
that all instructions were understood before the patient
left the dispensary - patient counselling 25 years
before it became fashionable at home.
We servicemen, working with locals, were expected to
pass a language test. In my case, this consisted of
learning about 200 words or phrases and being able to
give simple commands relating to my profession. Success
meant another £1 per week in one's pay - well worth
having in those days.
Regular visits to the camel lines were made to supply
medicaments. Kaolin poultice to reduce swellings was
called for, as were antiseptic dressings, anthelmintics,
and, most frequently of all, a laxative. There was
nothing more disagreeable than a constipated camel with
its tummy rumbling and noxious odours issuing from each
end of its alimentary canal. A couple of handfuls of
Epsom salts in a bucketful of water, which was usually
readily drunk, seemed to do the trick.
Operating Theatres
We did ensure that the operating theatres were in
good order. On occasions, I was asked to take
photographs of operations. Medicinal gases were the
responsibility of the hospital medical store presided
over by a warrant officer.
There were regular stockchecks, for even oxygen
cylinders seemed to have legs! It fascinated me how
stores experts could convert a surplus tin of hypodermic
needles to a missing oxygen cylinder, by adjusting the
stock records.
Regular, monthly orders were supplied to APL camps up
country. During my year I made several trips to the
camps to check stocks and inventories. These trips were
often combined with a medical team who were vaccinating
personnel against smallpox. (It is pleasing to note that
the area is now smallpox free.)
At ALH, our working day was from 6am until 1.30pm,
with a meal break of an hour. One evening in four I
would be rostered to be duty NCO at the hospital from
5.30pm until 9.30pm. During this period, wards would be
inspected, complaints dealt with, and arriving patients,
often emergencies, would be checked.
Time passed quickly. Having been a scoutmaster, I
helped out at the local scout troop in my spare time.
Weekend camps were organised in Sheik Othman Gardens
where there were shady palm trees and many colourful
tropical bushes. It was irrigated by canals of fresh
water, so it was always cool there.
National Service gave me a chance to travel, use my
qualifications and develop skills which later helped me
a lot while working and living in the Middle East. And
what is more, I enjoyed it.
Ian died in England 1 December
2001
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