Journal of the Medical Library Association (Apr 2023)

Early innovations in maritime telemedical services: the KDKF Radio Medico Station

  • Johnathan Thayer,
  • Stefan Dreisbach-Williams

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5195/jmla.2023.1567
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 111, no. 1/2

Abstract

Read online

“MAN PUT HIS TONGUE AGAINST REFRIGERATOR PIPE AND GOT IT FROZEN; HAVE THAWED IT OUT AND IT IS NOW BLISTERED AND SWOLLEN BUT NOT PAINFUL. ARRIVING HONOLULU FRIDAY; HOW CAN I HELP HIM MEANWHILE?” Thus read a message relayed via radiogram across the ocean to the physician stationed at the Seamen’s Church Institute’s (SCI) KDKF radio station, established by the Institute in 1920 on top of its thirteen-story seafarer services center at the southern tip of Manhattan. Though radio was in its infancy, radio telegraphy had already proven its revolutionary power, featuring prominently in far more serious maritime emergencies such as the sinking of Titanic. SCI’s KDKF radio station aimed to address a less dramatic but no less important problem in blue water navigation: access to medical care.

Keywords