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INSECT-BORNE DISEASES AND THE WAR

JAMA. 1919;72(3):195-196. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610030041019.
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Owing to the transport of troops to and from almost all parts of the world, the war has provided a ready means of conveying diseases, hitherto unknown, to various countries. This has been the case especially with tropical diseases, which in the past three years have occurred with more or less frequency in temperate climates, in France and England, for example. In some features, the war has resembled the Crusades in that during its continuance there has been a constant stream of large groups of men traveling backward and forward from eastern Europe and Asia to western Europe. There has been an increasing ingress into France, and to a considerably less extent, into England, of troops from nearly every part of Africa and the Orient; therefore the parasitic diseases that have been introduced in this manner cannot fail to have infected some of our men, and unless precautions are taken

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