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- Title
Getting Cold Feet in the First World War: Leaky Boots, Trench Foot and Vernacular Medicine Among British Soldiers.
- Authors
McWhinney, Georgia
- Abstract
During the First World War, trench warfare spurred the onset of various medical conditions. Yet, when soldiers fell ill, it was not immediately recognised that some maladies stemmed from contamination—soiling, infestation and poisons—in their uniforms. With a new focus on preventive medicine, doctors and medical scientists investigated numerous medical conditions that spread through contaminated uniforms. It is well known that these medical professionals developed a body of knowledge on the prevention of uniform contamination. It is far less known that soldiers also developed a set of medical ideas. Different 'systems of medical ideas' developed simultaneously during the Great War, and this is demonstrated through the study of trench foot. This article employs soldiers' voices not only to highlight their reliance on vernacular medicine in the trenches but also to reformulate the boundaries of medical practice and ask who can be considered a medical practitioner.
- Subjects
IMMERSION foot; WORLD War I; HOMEOPATHY; HISTORY of medicine; MILITARY personnel; POISONS; SOILING (Textiles); MILITARY uniforms
- Publication
Social History of Medicine, 2021, Vol 34, Issue 3, p895
- ISSN
0951-631X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/shm/hkaa054