Sanitary and epidemiological condition of the camp of interned soldiers-Ukrainians Aleksandrov (Poland), December 1920 – July 1921
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15587/2313-8416.2018.140133Keywords:
interned, hospital, ambulatory clinic, doctor, sanitary condition, disease, Aleksandrov, PolandAbstract
The article analyzes the sanitary and epidemiological situation in the camp of interned soldiers-Ukrainians in Alexandrov (Poland) in the late 1920s – the first half of 1921. It is proved that unsatisfactory sanitary condition in the camp was caused in the winter of 1921 to outbreaks of bone diseases which were immediately localized by the efforts of Ukrainian and Polish doctors. Subsequently, the overwhelming majority of patients interned were treated in the Ukrainian general-purpose hospital and ambulatory clinic, receiving qualified medical aid there
References
Karpus, Z. (1997). Jency і іnternowanі rosyjscy і ukraіńscy na terenіe Polskі w latach 1918–1924. Torun, 209.
Sribnyak, I. (1997). Obezzbroyena, ale neskorena: Internovana Armiya UNR u taborakh Polʹshchi y Rumuniyi (1921–1924 rr.) [Disarmed, but not overwhelmed: Interwar Army of the UPR in the camps of Poland and Romania (1921–1924 biennium)]. Kyiv-Filadelfiya, 187.
Tsentralʹnyy derzhavnyy arkhiv vyshchykh orhaniv vlady ta upravlinnya Ukrayiny (TSDAVO Ukrayiny) [Central State Archive of the Supreme Governments and Administrations of Ukraine], f. 2439, op. 1, spr. 33, ark. 5.
TSDAVO Ukrayiny, f. 2562, op. 1, spr. 32, ark. 108zv. -109.
TSDAVO Ukrayiny, f. 3526, op. 1, spr. 1, ark. 20zv.
Zirnytsya (1921). Oleksandriv, 3-4, 26.
TSDAVO Ukrayiny, f. 2439, op. 1, spr. 33, ark. 5.
TSDAVO Ukrayiny, f. 3526, op. 1, spr. 1, ark. 18.
TSDAVO Ukrayiny, f. 3526, op. 1, spr. 2, ark. 4-4zv.
TSDAVO Ukrayiny, f. 3520, op. 1, spr. 2, ark. 15-15zv.
TSDAVO Ukrayiny, f. 2439, op. 1, spr. 33, ark. 16.
TSDAVO Ukrayiny, f. 3526, op. 1, spr. 2, ark. 13, 23, 26-31.
Nove Zhyttya (1921). Aleksandrovo, 57, 4.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2018 Ihor Sribnyak
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Our journal abides by the Creative Commons CC BY copyright rights and permissions for open access journals.
Authors, who are published in this journal, agree to the following conditions:
1. The authors reserve the right to authorship of the work and pass the first publication right of this work to the journal under the terms of a Creative Commons CC BY, which allows others to freely distribute the published research with the obligatory reference to the authors of the original work and the first publication of the work in this journal.
2. The authors have the right to conclude separate supplement agreements that relate to non-exclusive work distribution in the form in which it has been published by the journal (for example, to upload the work to the online storage of the journal or publish it as part of a monograph), provided that the reference to the first publication of the work in this journal is included.