Korean J Parasitol.  2014 Jun;52(3):335-337.

Parasitic Diseases as the Cause of Death of Prisoners of War during the Korean War (1950-1953)

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Parasitology and Institute of Medical Education, College of Medicine, Hallym University, Chuncheon 200-702, Korea. shuh@hallym.ac.kr

Abstract

To determine the cause of death of prisoners of war during the Korean War (1950-1953), death certificates or medical records were analyzed. Out of 7,614 deaths, 5,013 (65.8%) were due to infectious diseases. Although dysentery and tuberculosis were the most common infectious diseases, parasitic diseases had caused 14 deaths: paragonimiasis in 5, malaria in 3, amoebiasis in 2, intestinal parasitosis in 2, ascariasis in 1, and schistosomiasis in 1. These results showed that paragonimiasis, malaria, and amoebiasis were the most fatal parasitic diseases during the early 1950s in the Korean Peninsula. Since schistosomiasis is not endemic to Korea, it is likely that the infected private soldier moved from China or Japan to Korea.

Keyword

parasitic disease; cause of death; Korean War; paragonimiasis; malaria; amoebiasis

MeSH Terms

Cause of Death
China
Human Migration
Humans
Japan
Korea
Korean War
Parasitic Diseases/*mortality
Prisoners of War
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