you gas them - which is exactly what mengele did his 1st day at birkenau, when theres an epidemic of typhoid, mengele's new method was to send everyone in the block to the gas chambers (even if the block has only 1 case of typhus)
then the baracks were all disinfected. and that's how you get rid of typhus!
mengele would boast. & he actually got a medal for it!
ther is no cure but there is treatments.
a lot
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the disease that Anne Frank had during the holocaust is called Typhus. it is caused by lice, and infected water supply. some of it's sypmtoms are: vomitting, nausea, back ache, abdominal pain, extremly high fever, dry cough, joint pain, and a spreading red body rash. it was mainly spread person to person and anne and her sister margot frank both died from the disease, along with 5 million other people of the holocaust.
During the Victorian era, the treatment for typhus fever primarily involved supportive care, as there were no effective medications available at the time. Patients were often isolated to prevent the spread of the disease, and care focused on rest, hydration, and nutrition. Quarantine measures were also implemented in outbreak situations. Additionally, improvements in sanitation and living conditions were recognized as crucial for prevention and control of typhus.
Typhus usually responds to antibiotic treatment. However, in some cases the Rickettsia bacteria remain dormant in cells and can cause another outbreak (possibly months or years later) in individuals who appear cured.
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.
In Victorian times, there was no specific cure for typhus, and treatment primarily focused on managing symptoms and providing supportive care. Patients were often isolated and given rest, hydration, and nutritious food. Quarantine measures were also implemented to control outbreaks, as the disease was understood to spread through lice and unsanitary conditions. Overall, medical understanding of typhus was limited, and many patients succumbed to the disease before the advent of antibiotics in the 20th century.
Typhoid fever is caused by Salmonella typhus, and is typically treated with general supportive care (fluids, nutritional support, etc.) and antibiotics.
Auromycin is a broad-spectrum antibiotic. It main use is for the treatment of penicillin-resistant bacterial infections, such as pneumonia, sepsis, and Staphylococcus aureus. The treatment can also cure typhus, pneumonia and amoebic dysentery.
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