Tuberculosis and War. Группа авторов

Tuberculosis and War - Группа авторов


Скачать книгу
comparatively shown for Denmark and The Netherlands, 1913–1922, with the time indicated for an abrupt change in nutrition for the Danish population as a result of policy change imposed by the warring countries, data from [28].

      Malnutrition

Img

      Tuberculosis fatality increased in Berlin stepwise during WWII from 19.0 in 1939 to 49.5% in 1945 when almost half of all TB patients died from the disease, most probably, as Meyer assumes, due to the lowered resistance to the disease caused by undernourishment, in particular protein deficiency [14].

      In 1946, Leyton reported that Russian POWs had more severe TB than British POWs and that there were large differences in the frequency of TB between British and Russian POWs. He also assumed that malnutrition stood out as the only causative factor among the Russians [24].

      Brozek et al. [23] observed a more acute and severe course of TB in their report on the health consequences of semi-starvation in the Leningrad siege, one of the longest and most destructive sieges in history and possibly the costliest in terms of casualties: “The increase in the incidence of TB was gradual, a few cases appearing December 1941, the peak being in May and June 1942. Much TB was seen, but remarkable was the fulminating character of the TB with hemorrhagic pleural effusion, widespread pulmonary disease and damage, miliary spread, and early death.”

      Daniels describes for France that in regions with ample supply of animal food and milk (Normandy, Brittany, Eastern France), where there had always been a high TB mortality, the rate declined throughout the war in contrast to regions with severe food shortages which showed a substantial rise, most prominently in Paris from 155 in 1938 to 215 per 100,000 population in 1941 [3].

      Other Host-Dependent Factors

      Stress

      Severe physical and mental stress (which may also weaken the immunologic resistance to TB [5]) was incurred during wartime in both civilian workers and those occupied in ammunition production or in military service. Innes, for example, explains the higher percentage of female deaths compared with pre-war years in the county of Rochdale (near Manchester/England), with the more extensive employment of women in the heavy industries for longer hours with less time and energy to devote to housekeeping [11].

      Age and Sex


Скачать книгу