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hospital, which actually consisted of two primary, one military, six reserve and a large number of field hospitals. From
December 1914 to May 1915 in Serbia, during the typhoid epidemic, 35,000 Serbian soldiers, 35,000 prisoners and 120,000 civilians died. The focus point of the disease was Valjevo,
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During the epidemic, all buildings in the city, including hotels, schools and cafes became hospital wards, and the streets and non-urbanized parts of the neighborhood were hospital corridors. As early as mid-December 1914, the number of patients had risen to 7,000 patients, and at the height of the
55:. He completed his medical studies, lived and worked in his homeland until 1915, when, as a member of the American Medical Mission, he came to the aid of Serbian small and poorly equipped military medical sanity. He was particularly involved in the vaccination of ill-affected of
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in which nearly ten thousand people died from the end of
December 1914 to the beginning of May 1915. The casualties included 3,500 Serb soldiers, 4,000 civilians and 2,000 Austro-Hungarian prisoners, and hundreds of sick died daily during the epidemic.
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epidemic, during
January and February 1915, the disease peaked. A decisive role in the suppression of the typhoid epidemic in Serbia had the American mission and was headed by one of the most significant
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Cook died of typhoid, treating diseased
Serbian soldiers. In Valjevo, a street is named after him.
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Saving Serbia: The
American Mission and the typhoid epidemic in Serbia in 1915
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Patients affected by typhus in a
Valjevo Hospital in 1915.
47:Dr. Samuel Albert Cook was born on May 3, 1878, in
128:"Američki doktor je dao život za srpske vojnike"
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32:(May 3, 1878 – February 10, 1915) was a
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25:Tomb of Samuel Albert Cook in Valjevo.
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184:American casualties of World War I
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126:Diković, J. (December 25, 2012).
174:20th-century American physicians
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179:Deaths from typhoid fever
40:mission in Serbia during
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38:American Red Cross
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16:American physician
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108:References
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132:Danas.rs
91:See also
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61:Valjevo
57:typhus
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