WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Epidemics Resulting from Wars cover

Epidemics Resulting from Wars

Chapter 45: CHAPTER IX FROM THE FRANCO-GERMAN WAR TO THE PRESENT TIME
Open in WeRead

About This Book

The book analyzes how armed conflict fosters epidemic disease among civilian populations, tracing historical outbreaks linked to troop movements, refugee flows, breakdowns in sanitation, and impaired public health services. It surveys the epidemiology of plague, cholera, and typhus in wartime, reviews statistical and historical evidence of mortality and social disruption, and considers medical and public-health measures that have mitigated such threats. Case studies illustrate how epidemics often caused greater demographic and economic damage than battlefield losses. The text combines historical narrative, empirical data, and policy discussion to explain mechanisms of contagion and to suggest preventive measures for reducing epidemic impact during and after wars.

CHAPTER IX
FROM THE FRANCO-GERMAN WAR TO THE PRESENT TIME

Among the great advances made in the last few decades of the nineteenth century must be included the successful battle of modern hygiene against infectious diseases. This struggle was introduced by the development of practical hygiene in England and by the perfection of scientific hygiene through the work of Pettenkofer. But a firm basis on which to combat pestilence was not secured until the brilliant discoveries of Koch and his successors pointed out to us the cause of these pestilences, and methods were found to demonstrate in a short time the presence of disease-germs, even among persons who become ill but slightly, or not at all, and who for that reason are very dangerous to those about them.

Since even in time of peace the close quarters in which soldiers live in barracks greatly favour the outbreak of epidemics, the military authorities constantly watched and profited by these advances in the field of disease-prevention; and with the success of efforts to decrease the prevalence of infectious diseases among the soldiers in time of peace, so also in war-times it became possible to check more thoroughly than ever before the dissemination of these diseases. Hence the number of men carried away by epidemics is much smaller in modern wars than used to be the case.