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Brigadier Hugh Llewellyn Glyn Hughes stated there were no sanitary at the Belsen trial.

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What were safety and sanitary conditions like in factories?

Safety and sanitary conditions in factories, particularly during the Industrial Revolution and early 20th century, were often poor. Workers faced hazardous environments with inadequate ventilation, exposure to toxic substances, and insufficient safety measures, leading to high rates of accidents and injuries. Sanitary conditions were also lacking, with overcrowded workspaces, limited access to clean water, and poor waste disposal practices contributing to health issues among workers. Over time, labor movements and regulations improved these conditions, but challenges remained in many industries.


Did Dorothea Dix have interactions with Clara Barton?

They were active in developing nursing corps and sanitary medical conditions for soldiers


What was the trenches like in World War 1?

Answerliving conditions in the trenches are hard why is it hard to live in the trenchesMany of Brittish soldiers died because of disease. The sanitary conditions in the trenches are quite poor, and common infections included dysentery, typhus, and cholera. Many soldiers suffered from parasites and related infections. Poor hygiene also led to fungal conditions.


What did the industrial revolution created a need for?

More labor workers to operate machinery. More living places for those workers. Reform because those workers were treated like crap with bad sanitary conditions and long working hours etc.


What where the sanity conditions like in trenches in world war 1?

If you meant ''sanitary'' not ''sanity''. There were Sanitary Officers appointed whose jobs were to: 1. To exercise general supervision over the sanitary condition of all places occupied by the troops of the command to which they are attached. 2. To watch the health conditions of billets, camps, and bivouacs, and at once investigate the cause of any unusual prevalence of disease among the troops or the inhabitants. 3. Advise on the measures which should, in their opinion, be taken to protect the health of the troops, and report on the adequacy of the arrangements already made for that purpose. 4. Advise on the selection, from a sanitary point of view, of sites for camps and bivouacs, and on questions relating to the sanitary condition of towns, villages, or buildings about to be occupied. To this end they should accompany the Staff Officers charged with the selection of camps, billets, or bivouacs. 5. Advise regarding the purification and distribution of water for drinking purposes; also in respect of latrines and urinals, burial of the dead, and disposal of refuse and carcasses of animals, etc. 6. Impress on Commanders of units and on Medical Officers in charge of troops the imperative necessity of obtaining the highest possible standard in sanitation, both in camp and on the line of march, and bring to the notice of superior authority any neglect of sanitary measures possible under existing circumstances.