During the 2nd World War, large numbers of allied military personnel in south-east Asia became prisoners-of-war (POWs) of the Japanese. During their internment of three and a half years, they suffered undernutrition, exposure to tropical diseases and frequently overwork. Perhaps the harshest POW experience was the construction of the railway between Thailand and Burma. This paper explores the medical conditions during Far East imprisonment, and in particular on the Thai-Burma Railway, as well as the long-term health effects in post-war decades
Experiences of captivity in Japanese-occupied Asia varied enormously. Some prisoners of war (POWs) w...
Scholarship on Japan’s Occupation Period (1945-1952) has focused on the ways in which Japan was tran...
The third pandemic of plague (in its bubonic and pneumonic clinical forms) struck the globe between ...
In 1942-43 a force of possibly 200,000 to 300,000 people, working under the supervision of the Imper...
Since World War II, the medical work performed by Australian prisoners-of-war Lieutenant Colonel A.E...
During the building of the Thai-Burma railway in 1943 Australian and British prisoners of war died a...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2003 Dr. Rosalind Shirley HearderDuring World War II, 106...
International audienceMore than ten years after the British experience in Malaysia, the medical prot...
© 2013 Dr. Geoffrey Grant QuailHistorically, prolonged battles were frequently lost and won because ...
The Author is the recipient of the John Guilmartin Scholarship in Military HistoryMalaria's impact o...
Author Institution: Former Chief, Quarantine Branch, Office of The Surgeon General ; Army Member, In...
Though medical consequences of war attract attention, the health consequences of the prisoner-of-war...
© 1969 Ka Seng ChuaMedicine is nearly as old as man himself, and the hospital designed as an institu...
This article examines the malaria problem among Chinese migrant laborers in Manchuria, particularly ...
A map of the Thailand-Burma railway and the basic facts behind its logistics, workforce, and constr...
Experiences of captivity in Japanese-occupied Asia varied enormously. Some prisoners of war (POWs) w...
Scholarship on Japan’s Occupation Period (1945-1952) has focused on the ways in which Japan was tran...
The third pandemic of plague (in its bubonic and pneumonic clinical forms) struck the globe between ...
In 1942-43 a force of possibly 200,000 to 300,000 people, working under the supervision of the Imper...
Since World War II, the medical work performed by Australian prisoners-of-war Lieutenant Colonel A.E...
During the building of the Thai-Burma railway in 1943 Australian and British prisoners of war died a...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2003 Dr. Rosalind Shirley HearderDuring World War II, 106...
International audienceMore than ten years after the British experience in Malaysia, the medical prot...
© 2013 Dr. Geoffrey Grant QuailHistorically, prolonged battles were frequently lost and won because ...
The Author is the recipient of the John Guilmartin Scholarship in Military HistoryMalaria's impact o...
Author Institution: Former Chief, Quarantine Branch, Office of The Surgeon General ; Army Member, In...
Though medical consequences of war attract attention, the health consequences of the prisoner-of-war...
© 1969 Ka Seng ChuaMedicine is nearly as old as man himself, and the hospital designed as an institu...
This article examines the malaria problem among Chinese migrant laborers in Manchuria, particularly ...
A map of the Thailand-Burma railway and the basic facts behind its logistics, workforce, and constr...
Experiences of captivity in Japanese-occupied Asia varied enormously. Some prisoners of war (POWs) w...
Scholarship on Japan’s Occupation Period (1945-1952) has focused on the ways in which Japan was tran...
The third pandemic of plague (in its bubonic and pneumonic clinical forms) struck the globe between ...