Trench Foot Research Paper

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Intro: Life in the trenches during the First World War was simply a blood bath. It was the last thing the hundreds and thousands of soldiers expected when they enlisted. Trench Foot: Trench Foot is a horrible fact about fighting in the trenches during World War One. Trench foot is a painful disease that you get on your feet caused by being under cold water, or mud for a very long of time. Your feet will turn black and the skin will die and rot. If you have trench foot your feet will become numb, they will turn red or turn blue from having bad blood circulation and your feet will have a very bad rotting smell. As the disease gets worse, your feet will also swell. Bad cases of trench foot have blisters and cuts, which lead to fungal infections. This is sometimes called jungle rot. If you don’t get them treated, trench foot can results in gangrene, which your feet would than have to be amputated. If trench foot is treated properly, complete recovery is normal, even when fully recovered however you will still have severe short-term pain. if you have had trench Trench foot before you will be a lot more likely to get it again. The Lice: The lice is another terrible fact about being in the trench’s. Almost every person in the trenches had lice at one point or another. Fortunately for the lice the conditions of the trenches was a perfect place foe the lice to reproduce. There are three types of lice - head, pubic and body. Lice could only live and repopulate in warm conditions. Which the body heat and clothing was perfect for them. In spreading from person to person lice had to be very close to the next soldier and this was readily provided as men huddled together to stay warm. Shell Shock: Shell shock is brain trauma, menta... ... middle of paper ... ... Canadian soldiers took Hill 70 in August 1917 which was just north of Arras. After being transferred to the Ypres battle, the Canadians took the previously undefeatable objective of Passchendaele on November 6th 1917. However we lost 15,000 casualties while taking Passchendaele. Sometime in March 1918 cavalry and motorized machine-gun units of the Canadian Corps assisted to hold the line at Amiens, when the Germans tried their last big attack. “Then the Canadians formed the “spearhead” of the attack between Hourges and Villers-Bretonneux, afterwards coming back to the Arras area.” On September 2nd 1918, seven different Canadians earned the Victoria Cross in amazing honourable fighting. Conclusion: In conclusion Canada’s importance was very important. If Canada was not involved in this war it would have been a lot different ending to the war. By:Josh Jones

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