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Camp Follower: Tuberculosis in World War II With war looming in 1940, the National Research Council asked Long to chair the Division of Medical Sci-ences, Subcommittee for Tuberculosis, to advise the government on preventing and controlling tuberculosis in both civilian and military populations during war mobilization
UCF-VLP-9th-12th-SPAM-DiseaseImpact-TyphoidArticle During that war army surgeon Joseph Janvier Woodward published his Outlines of the Chief Camp Diseases of the United States Army, the bible of the Union Army Medical Corps, in which he assessed Budd's evidence that typhoid was a contagious fever propagated by infected human dejections
War Dysentery and the Limitations of German Military . . . advances in understanding the disease and limiting dysentery major reasons are adduced for the incapacity of German military prevent wartime epidemics First was the difficulty of bacteriological the front, especially early in the war, with negative consequences therapy, and disease control Second was inadequate hygiene
History of U. S. Military Contributions to the Study of Viral . . . Rates of this disease among U S troops continued to be alarming in Germany after the war, an observation consistent with the high endemic, and at times epidemic, rates of infectious jaundice that had been recognized in the German population for decades
Siberian Intervention 1918-1922 | International Encyclopedia . . . While the vast majority of troops joining Czechoslovak and White Russian forces came from Japan and the United States, British, French, Canadian, Belgian, Polish, Serb, Italian, Romanian and Chinese contingents also contributed to the “Siberian Intervention”, which began in August 1918
RUSSIAN CIVIL WAR AND AMERICAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCES IN . . . - Gale This collection reproduces important letters, reports, memorandums, cablegrams, maps, charts, and other kinds of records relating to the activities of the American Expeditionary Forces in Siberia (hereafter, AEF in Siberia), 1918-20