Answer:
A is the correct answer
Explain:
You can easily rule out D because there are still conflicts to this day. Now you have it easier to get the right answer. WW2 was the first truly modern war, in the civil war and evem WW1 they still waited to see the whites of peoples eyes before they fired. And the majority of the battles were actually fought in the north.
The American Red Cross would have provided the greatest opportunity.
Over 22.000 Red Cross nurses were enrolled to support the armed forces medical corps.
As well, several thousand women volunteers worked overseas in a variety of jobs aside from nursing like nurses'aides, canteen workers and support workers helping sort and distribute Red Cross parcels destined for the troops.
Answer:
Two evidences to prove the advancement in science and medicine during the Ayyubid dynasty are:
- The development of the science of Ophthalmology
- The building of different types of hospitals, known as <em>Al-Bimaristan.</em>
Explanation:
The rulers in the Ayyubid dynasty took special interest in the development of scientific knowledge, mostly in the branches of medicine, botany and pharmacology.
Hospitals were built that were well staffed, with each hospital having its own laboratory, dispensary, outdoor clinic, kitchen and bath.
A very important innovation made during the Ayyubid dynasty in their hospitals was a system were patients are only discharged after they were fully cured, this was determined if a patient could eat and digest one whole chicken with bread. They also built military hospitals.
They contributed to the West in important areas of science including raising the standards of medicine, medical education and medical ethics.
The science of ophthalmology was also greatly developed to a very high standard due to research in the study of eye diseases and their treatment done in Hospitals in Cairo and Damascus. The results of this development even had more impact in the west than in the Arab countries.
Scientists and physicians that contributed to the development of science and medicine during the Ayyubid dynasty include Ibn al Baytar, Musa Ibn Maymun, Al-Dakhwar and Muwaffaq al Din Ibn Matran.