The Infamous Spanish Influenza
Research Fellowship Museum of Health Care Research Fellowship Museum of Health Care

The Infamous Spanish Influenza

Over the coming summer months, I have the pleasure of developing a manuscript for the Museum of Health Care discussing the Spanish Influenza’s impact on Kingston. With biweekly blogs, I hope to share some of the insights, stories, and images that I come across as I explore this fascinating topic.

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Voluntary Veil: The Canadian Voluntary Aid Detachment in the First World War
Ex crypta: The Curator..., Exhibitions & Gall... Museum of Health Care Ex crypta: The Curator..., Exhibitions & Gall... Museum of Health Care

Voluntary Veil: The Canadian Voluntary Aid Detachment in the First World War

Before the mid 19th century, women had a discreet but ever-present role on the battlefield, mostly as camp followers. When women such as Florence Nightingale started to demonstrate the value of military nurses, armies began to slowly, but surely assign them to their medical services.

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A Fighting Chance: Disease, Public Health, and the Military, Part 3
Research Fellowship Museum of Health Care Research Fellowship Museum of Health Care

A Fighting Chance: Disease, Public Health, and the Military, Part 3

From a medical point of view the two military campaigns to capture the Dutch island of Walcheren – the first in 1809, the second in 1944 – could not have been more different. The 1809 British expedition was ravaged by disease, a lethal combination of malaria, typhus, typhoid fever, and dysentery that infected over 60% of the force, killed over 4,000 soldiers, and left tens of thousands as casualties.

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A Fighting Chance: Disease, Public Health, and the Military, Part 1
Research Fellowship Museum of Health Care Research Fellowship Museum of Health Care

A Fighting Chance: Disease, Public Health, and the Military, Part 1

When we think about war and health care our imaginations are immediately drawn to ideas of war wounds, amputations, mobile surgical hospitals, and even psychiatric trauma and PTSD. These are among the most visible marks that war can leave on its participants. But until very recently in human history, war and health care meant something else.

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