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stomach and recurrent typhoid, followed by cholera, diphtheria and dysentery. Valjevo, unfortunately,   Diseases. Initially, the work of the National Committee was limited to seeking ways to stop the
 got the sad role of the place of the greatest suffering, and at the same time the place of illness and death;   epidemic at its beginning, but in vain. By mid-December 1914, the epidemic had developed. All reports
 from Valjevo, the epidemic flowed over Serbia, like a river. The main sources of infection were the sick   from the hospitals showed a dramatic increase of the number of the infected, especially in Valjevo,
 Austro-Hungarian prisoners, and already infected patients who were sent from Valjevo to Kragujevac,   where somewhat later the epidemic broke out like fire, immediately after 15 January 1915, mowing
 Vrnjačka Banja, Niš, Skopje, Bitola... In addition to the sick and infected Austro-Hungarian soldiers,   down everything in sight. The most troubling was that the number of new infections rose sharply in the
 the Serbian army wounded were recklessly accommodated in Valjevo and in other places. Railway   combat units. Lacking a sufficient number of doctors, which was constantly declining due to their
 stations and trains were full of soldiers, prisoners and the sick civilians. In the cold and rainy weather,   falling ill and dying, the unit commanders moved their field hospitals closer to Valjevo. That made it
 people sought shelter and pressed close to each other. Many refugees from the interior started returning   easier also to supply the units, as they had the railway in the vicinity. In the Fifth Regiment, the First
 to their homes, and after the expulsion of the enemy forces, they slept on the floor in taverns, inns and   Field Hospital of the Danube Division first call was in the direction of Grabovica, the First Field
 warehouses, mostly in places where there had previously been large numbers of the infected people. In   Hospital of the Drina Division first call in Brankovina, the First Field Hospital of the Morava Division
 all those places, lice, which left the patient as soon as he started to develop fever, waited for their new   second call in the Pečka and Pričevic, the Second Field Hospital of the Danube Division second call in
 victims. The main routes and sites for the spread of the epidemic were primarily railway tracks and   Osečina, and the Seventeenth Regiment hospital was in Koceljeva. In accordance with the order, only
 roads, followed by temporary and permanent hospitals.  the most severe wounded were singled out and referred to the Valjevo hospitals for further care.
 Large numbers of refugees, especially from the Drina valley and Mačva, had no place to return to, as   Attempts were made for the doctors from the one hospital to provide help to the sick in other hospitals as
 their houses had been destroyed and burnt down, their property looted, without any livestock and food   well.
 left. John Reed stated that the refugees came off the train and stayed there “near the rails, with all their   The auxiliary hospitals in the town, in the buildings of the Grammar School, Medical School,

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 belongings in one sack thrown over the shoulder, silently watching the ruins of their homes.“ The   Divisional Armoury, the Fifth Regiment barracks, and the District Hospital at the beginning of the
 authorities, having recognized the problem, stopped the returns of these refugees because they could   epidemic and for a long time afterwards accommodated only the Austro-Hungarian patients. With the
 not provide them even the most basic living conditions. It so happened that some of the returnees were   restauration and cleaning of other buildings, they had to accommodate the excess numbers of sick
 stopped once again in Valjevo.   patients from other hospitals, and only after that the sick from the Serbian army. It so happened that, due
 Already from 13 December 1914, in Valjevo, the last of the taverns “Venecija“, “Suša“, “Grozd“,   to the circumstances, the majority of the sick patients from the Serbian troops spent in the winter in field
 and “Srpski kralj“ were seized for the purposes of accommodating a large number of sick people, and   hospitals,  in  tents,  and  the Austro-Hungarians  in  the  Valjevo  hospitals,  with  a  large  number  of
 thus became isolated hospital wards. With no available additional space to accommodate the patients,   physicians to provide assistance to them. The Valjevo medical staff did not for a moment differentiate
 the High Command staff, not knowing how typhus is transmitted, adopted a disastrous decision: on 21   between the sick patients, and there is not a single such case described in the numerous diaries of the
 December 1914 they ordered the dismissal of all not severely wounded and sick soldiers from all the   Austro-Hungarian soldiers or foreigners. They gave their lives treating them responsibly, in good faith,
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 hospitals.  The consequences were devastating. Typhus came with the sick to almost every house or a   with exceptional sacrifice. Between the Serbian and the abandoned doctors and medical staff, there was
 soldier who had returned uninfected caught it from those who were sick and spread it out. The Serbian   an honest relationship of trust developed. It is known that especially doctor Avram Vinaver, who had
 government  requested  urgent  assistance  from  foreign  doctors.  Even  before  that,  the  military   serious problems with the occupying authorities, advocated exceptionally and in every place that all
 authorities, knowing that every army and large troop movements are followed by infectious diseases, in   patients and staff prisoners should be provided the best possible care. Deadly diseases mowed down
 October called on the embassies in Paris, St. Petersburg and London asking for 10 bacteriologists and   soldiers on the both sides, the citizens, newcomers, doctors and paramedics alike. In that horrible
 20 epidemiologists, including the support staff. They had been receiving news about individual cases of   drama, facing terrible and painful sufferings and trials, they were all mere mortals, without uniforms
 ld
 typhus, truth be to , three cases in different places in total, as well as dysentery, and a description of one   and without colours.
 smallpox case, but unverified. At the time of the Great War, requesting doctors from the countries that   Doctors were powerless not only in stopping, but also in slowing down the diseases, of which
 were also involved in the military operations mainly had poor results.   typhus was the most dangerous one. There were days when, in some hospitals, out of 1,600 new
 Having noted that the number of patients suffering from all three types of typhoid increases daily   admission soldiers, 1,100 of them were sick. In some places, in the most difficult days, the mortality rate
 and  rapidly,  the  government  established  a  National  Committee  for  the  Prevention  of  Infectious   was as high as 70% of the total number of patients. It was said that those who did not die in the battlefield



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