From Trench and Camp, printed
weekly for the Y.M.C.A. by courtesy of the Charlotte Observer for Camp Greene, Charlotte, N.C., February
4, 1918. Camp editor H.M. Thurston; Associate editors F.M. Burnett, D.M.
Spence, J.H. Strawbridge, C.H. Ellinwood, C.E. Winchell.
So much has been written and said about the death rate among
soldiers in training in the United States that a little exact and authentic
information might not be amiss at this juncture.
War Department records show that from the middle of
September to the last of December the death rate among the soldiers in camps
and cantonments was 7.5 per thousand. In other words, out of every 2,000 men,
15 died, while 1,985 lived. The death rate of 7.5 per thousand is less than the
rate would have been if all the men in the camps had remained at home in
civilian clothes.
The death rate per thousand among United States soldiers in
1898 was 20.14, or nearly three times as great.
In 1916 the death rate in the Army was 5 per thousand.
But for the outbreak of measles and its complications in the
camps and cantonments, the death rate from September to December would have
been only 2 per thousand.
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