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Medical Department, United States Army: Preventive Medicine in World War II. Volume IV: Communicable Diseases Transmitted Chiefly Through Respiratory and Alimentary Tracts

JAMA. 1959;169(10):1141. doi:10.1001/jama.1959.03000270123025.
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ABSTRACT

This volume is a part of the clinical as distinguished from the administrative series on the history of the Medical Department of the Army in World War II. Two previous volumes on preventive medicine have been published. After an introductory chapter by Dr. John E. Gordon there are sections on diseases transmitted through the respiratory and alimentary tracts. Among others Dr. Joseph Stokes contributed chapters on chicken pox, mumps, measles, rubella, and pertussis; Dr. Philip Sartwell one on common respiratory diseases; Dr. Thomas Francis Jr. one on influenza; Dr. Joseph Smadel one on psittacosis; Col. L. A. Potter one on smallpox; Dr. A. C. McGuiness one on diphtheria; Dr. Esmond Long one on tuberculosis; Dr. Dwight Kuhns one on salmonelloses; Dr. Gail Dack one on food poisoning; and the late Gen. R. A. Kelser one on brucellosis. This partial list of contributors gives some idea of the high quality of

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