Of course not. Antibiotics weren't developed until the mid-1940's, 30 years later.
You have ciprofloxacin, ceftriaxone injections, azithromycin and chloramphenicol to treat the typhoid fever. One of the above drug can treat the typhoid fever.
There are two vaccines for typhoid, Ty21a, which is given orally, and Vi capsular polysaccharide vaccine, which is an injectable subunit vaccine.
Antibiotics
Doxycycline is useless for typhoid fever.
While sick with typhoid fever, people suffer from high fevers that can cause delirium. They may develop rose spotted rashes, diarrhea, headaches, and perforations in the intestines. Antibiotics are able to treat the disease and carriers should not work with food to prevent the spreading of typhoid fever.
No. Not at all. Malaria is a parasitic infection from mosquitoes. You can treat malaria by anti-malaria drugs. There is no vaccine. Typhoid fever is caused by a bacteria. People infected by this bacteria can spread it to other people who contaminate food or water. There is a typhoid vaccine and the infection can be treated with antibiotics.
taking antibiotics, using cold ice-packs for headaches and checking all food before eating it.
You have not invented new antibiotic from many years. Instead you have misused them to create the resistant bacteria. You have ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacin and azithromycin to treat the typhoid. Technically the ciprofloxacin is not an antibiotic. Ciprofloxacin is not obtained from microorganisms. It is a fluroquinolone and is man made, in the laboratory, from modification of nalidixic acid.
To treat typhoid fever
There was no cure for typhoid in Victorian time. the old wise physician, probably used to treat typhoid by good nursing care. There was about 20 % mortality for the typhoid fever, at that time.
Ileitis can be caused by a variety of diseases including Crohn's Disease and Typhoid Fever. Treatment for Ileitis include antibiotics, bed rest, and a low fiber diet.
Chloramphenicol