WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Epidemics Resulting from Wars cover

Epidemics Resulting from Wars

Chapter 48: 3. The War in South-west Africa (1904–7)[313]
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.

3. The War in South-west Africa (1904–7)[313]

In the very first year of the war, typhoid fever broke out with great severity. The disease first made its appearance in the war against the Herero nation in the first part of April 1904; it attacked the eastern division of the army, which was commanded by Major von Glasenapp and numbered twenty-five officers and 509 men, in Onjatu (midway between Windhuk and Waterberg), after the soldiers had been exposed to rainy weather, cold nights, and extreme hardship. On April 6 there were six cases of the disease reported, and by April 16 the number of cases had increased to sixty-six; the division was then transferred to Otjihaenena, where the patients were housed in permanent lazarets and the healthy men were quarantined. Throughout the remaining part of the war, typhoid fever played an important rôle; the total number of deaths in the years 1904–7 was 1,491; of these 689 succumbed to diseases, 439 of them to typhoid fever. The soldiers who fought in the battles against the Hereros were most severely attacked; of a total of 470 deaths 283 were caused by typhoid fever and only twenty-two by other diseases. In the three years’ struggle against the Hottentots some 1,200 soldiers died; 375 of them died of diseases; of the 375 typhoid fever was responsible for 156.