ALOT! But most of them died from blood loss,caused by wounds, being shot or from a gas attack.
a lot of poeple we can not be certain how many people did get treated proably in the 1000s
Answeraccording to my books, 75,000 brits had it but only 41 died from it which i am not sure is 100% correct
Common diseases and illnesses in the trenches were that there were many rats in the trenches, this gave the soldiers diseases. There was trench foot, which made their feet turn rot and swell up from the moisture. Some people said they could put a bayonet through their foot and they wouldn't feel it There was also trench fever, which was found to be caused by lice, and in the last year of the war, the "Spanish Flu" hit the world, including the trenches of Europe. In the War Diary I studied, the most common illnesses were boils and skin problems or ICT the soldiers were vaccinated against typhoid. Lastly shell shock and blindness or burns from mustard gas.
Many Germans felt they had been treated unfairly in the Treaty of Versailles
You could also say, "a toilet used in the second World War"
50,000
Trench foot comes from having your feet wet and cold for long periods of time. The name comes from the world war in wich trenches were the main battle enviroment. Cold and wet many soldiers developed trench foot. Trench foot can be treated but can also end up in the amputation of the feet. Toes turn black and no longer able to cure.
Answeraccording to my books, 75,000 brits had it but only 41 died from it which i am not sure is 100% correct
Trench foot is a disease caused by the cold and wet. It was a huge problem in ww1, many soldiers would only be treated in the late stages meaning they have to have an amputation, some didn't survive.
80,000
Some soldiers in world war 1 suffered from trench foot this is when many soldiers used to get black feet that had lots of massive spots. Also soldiers suffered from shell shock thiswas when soldiers was basically hypnotized.
Its safe to say that half the world gets a fever each year.
In World War 1, trench warfare often resulted in a stalemate between opposing sides, which killed nearly as many men as open warfare would have. In trench warfare, disease and infections killed many of the soldiers on both sides.
In World War 1, trench warfare often resulted in a stalemate between opposing sides, which killed nearly as many men as open warfare would have. In trench warfare, disease and infections killed many of the soldiers on both sides.
The first world war is usually referred to as a trench war. A trench war is fought generally in trenches You can look up trench warfare" in wikipedia where it will tell you more about how it is fought. Belgium and north France still have many sites where the trenches can be visited and viewed a sad memorial to a war in which so many people died.
well the question you asked does not make and sense. but during WWI there was trench warfare. The Germans had many trenches especially on the west front.
It has been estimated that about %25 of all casualties were down to Trench foot, all though many cases were mis diagnosed, or went unrecorded so the actual figure is thought to be slightly higher.
There are so many examples of bacterial disease. Some of them include bacillus anthracis, chlamydia trachomatis, helicobacter pylori and many more.