Annual Reports of the Secretary of War, Volume 1, Part 3 |
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Common terms and phrases
absolute numbers activities admissions and deaths aid stations ambulance Ambulance Company American Expeditionary Forces animals armistice arrived assigned average strength base hospitals battalion beds billets Camp Greenleaf Camp Sherman casualties cent centers chief surgeon dental depots detachment divisional dressing stations duty enlisted epidemic equipment established Europe Evacuation Hospital Field Hospital Fort Oglethorpe Fort Riley France French front gassed Glanders headquarters hospital trains Infantry influenza inspection instruction July laboratory large camps large number Letterman General Hospital lobar pneumonia located measles Medical Corps Medical Department medical officers medical supply ment military Mobile Hospital mules necessary November November 11 numbers and ratios nurses October operations organization overseas patients period personnel pital pneumonia received Red Cross regimental reports sanitary train sanitation sector sent September Services of Supply soldiers special infectious diseases splints Surgeon General's Office surgical tion transportation treatment triage troops tuberculosis United United States Army white and colored
Popular passages
Page 2847 - And be it enacted, that the said board is hereby authorized and empowered to agree with the Bureau of Animal Industry of the Department of Agriculture...
Page 2847 - No. 7 were discharged and passed to the jurisdiction of the Bureau of War Risk Insurance and the Federal Board for Vocational Education. The...
Page 2847 - AGO] BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF WAR : PEYTON C. MARCH, General, Chief of Staff.
Page 2847 - ... a soldier, and the privileges which are his as a disabled man, from the Medical Department of the Army, the Federal Board for Vocational Education, and the Bureau of War Risk Insurance; to place in his...
Page 2847 - A special subcommittee was organized to assist the Committee on Education and Special Training of the War Department to adapt instruction in psychology to the needs of the Special Activity Training Camp.
Page 3151 - Their maps will be kept up to date and copies furnished incoming troops and others whose health depends upon such knowledge. (11) It should be understood that the enlisted men of sanitary squads are not labor troops, ie, they do not police or care for grounds, billets, and areas, or dispose of refuse. They function as assistants to the sanitary inspector of the Second Army. These arrangements provide an adequate sanitary supervision, which serves the important purposes of keeping constant guard over...
Page 2866 - Okla., instructions have been issued requiring all Government-owned stallions and mares, also private mares presented for service to. a Government stallion, to pass a negative blood test before service. An exception to this rule was made in the case of the depot at Front Royal, Va. As the disease has never been reported in 300...
Page 3047 - ... army, both those in divisions and those designated as army troops. For this purpose he must maintain in his office some kind of a reporting system whereby he can constantly keep his hand on the pulse of the sick rate.
Page 3151 - ... etc., drawing upon the sanitary shop of the section for labor and materials. (3) They will keep in touch with the engineer water personnel working in the subarea. (4) They will, as well as possible, keep themselves informed of infectious diseases occurring in the civilian population in the subarea and see that such disease is promptly reported to the proper medical authorities. (5) They will furnish all information gathered by them to town majors and commanding officers of incoming troops as...
Page 3158 - Infantry, 88th Division, located at Morlaincourt. This outbreak originated almost certainly from the use of polluted water, and was perpetuated with equal certainty by personal contact. The total number of cases that occurred between the dates mentioned was 21, and the highest total for a single week was 6, for the week of February 12-18. In the course of investigation it developed that there were three sources of water to" which this organization had access. One of them was found by all methods...