In October 1918, an Allied army (Egyptian Expeditionary Force) in Palestine experienced simultaneous epidemics of falciparum malaria and influenza during the cavalry campaign that defeated the Turkish Army
One of the biggest problems caused by wars is epidemic diseases. Sometimes the epidemics, which are ...
The Malaria Control in War Areas program, established in March 1942, is a joint undertaking by the U...
Purulent bronchitis was a distinctive and apparently new lethal respiratory infection in British and...
During the first World War (1914-1918), the British Army found itself confronting enemy armies in se...
Malaria has been a military problem throughout history capable of causing epidemics that stop milita...
Fivemajor outbreakswere encountered in the armed forces: (1) typhoid fever; (2) typhus (Rickettsia s...
There were multiple waves of influenza-like illness in 1918, the last of which resulted in a highly ...
An outbreak of malaria first developed within Second Battalion Royal Australian Regiment, a forward ...
At the end of World War I, British medical officers noted that soldiers infected with malaria were m...
The 1918-1919 influenza pandemic was the greatest mortality event in recent history whose specific o...
The 25th of April is a national day to honour the members of the Australian and New Zealand Army Cor...
This article overviews infectious disease in army camps during the summer and autumn of 1918. The au...
The Meuse-Argonne offensive, a decisive battle during the First World War, is the largest frontline ...
This article explores the decisive role of British military medicine in shaping official approaches ...
the Fort Riley Army Hospital in Kansas was inundated with patients complaining of headaches, sore th...
One of the biggest problems caused by wars is epidemic diseases. Sometimes the epidemics, which are ...
The Malaria Control in War Areas program, established in March 1942, is a joint undertaking by the U...
Purulent bronchitis was a distinctive and apparently new lethal respiratory infection in British and...
During the first World War (1914-1918), the British Army found itself confronting enemy armies in se...
Malaria has been a military problem throughout history capable of causing epidemics that stop milita...
Fivemajor outbreakswere encountered in the armed forces: (1) typhoid fever; (2) typhus (Rickettsia s...
There were multiple waves of influenza-like illness in 1918, the last of which resulted in a highly ...
An outbreak of malaria first developed within Second Battalion Royal Australian Regiment, a forward ...
At the end of World War I, British medical officers noted that soldiers infected with malaria were m...
The 1918-1919 influenza pandemic was the greatest mortality event in recent history whose specific o...
The 25th of April is a national day to honour the members of the Australian and New Zealand Army Cor...
This article overviews infectious disease in army camps during the summer and autumn of 1918. The au...
The Meuse-Argonne offensive, a decisive battle during the First World War, is the largest frontline ...
This article explores the decisive role of British military medicine in shaping official approaches ...
the Fort Riley Army Hospital in Kansas was inundated with patients complaining of headaches, sore th...
One of the biggest problems caused by wars is epidemic diseases. Sometimes the epidemics, which are ...
The Malaria Control in War Areas program, established in March 1942, is a joint undertaking by the U...
Purulent bronchitis was a distinctive and apparently new lethal respiratory infection in British and...