A U.S. Navy training film about the usage and importance of DDT as a insecticide for the control of disease transmitting insects in military camps during World War 2. Man sprays DDT ( Dichloro-Diphenyl-Trichloroethane) inside a hut to prevent various mosquito, bedbugs and other insects. Men paint a door screen with DDT mixture. DDT being sprayed on window screen. A man sprays DDT on containers. DDT being sprayed in a wooded area on plants.
A U.S. Navy training film about the usage and importance of DDT as a disinfectant in the United States. An officer gets off a jeep and boards an aircraft. He sprays DDT (Dichloro-Diphenyl-Trichloroethane) inside the aircraft. Men spray DDT in a wooded area on plants and trees. Interiors of an aircraft show men spraying DDT to prevent diseases.
A U.S. Navy training film about the usage and importance of DDT (Dichloro-Diphenyl-Trichloroethane) as a disinfectant in the United States. DDT being sprayed on a man's hair and beard. A man sprays DDT powder under a pile of sacks and on a wooden frame. Another man sprays DDT at the base of a platform with containers placed on it.
A U.S. Navy training film about the usage and importance of DDT (Dichloro-Diphenyl-Trichloroethane) as a disinfectant in the United States. DDT being sprayed on the surface of a pond of water. DDT powder being poured into a puddle of dirty water to prevent spread of malaria and other deadly diseases. A container placed on a scaffold over a pond. As DDT solution drips from the container and mixes with pond water. A man pours DDT solution over plants in water. Insects at the water surface. A swarm of dead insects after spraying DDT.
A U.S. Navy training film titled 'Medicine in action: Head injury of a battle casualty' about the treatment and recovery of a soldier wounded during World War II. Private Wilmer of the U.S. 6th Army. A map of Casino Italy where Wilmer was injured during the battle of World War II. Aerial views of an evacuation hospital where Wilmer was given initial medical assistance after being injured. Wilmer with bandage on his scalp at a general hospital in Italy. Doctors clean the wound on the scalp. They try to control the bleeding. Blood clot being removed and wound being checked for infection. Bone fragments being removed from the wound. Wound being stitched. After six days wound being examined. Private Wilmer arrives in Naples in an ambulance. He boards a hospital ship in England and leaves for North Africa. At a camp he talks to other injured patients. Private Wilmer gets off a jeep and boards U.S. Army hospital ship Acadia to leave for United States. At Walter Ridge hospital he moves his hands and legs to demonstrate physical normality after being injured. Doctors administer anesthesia on his scalp and work on the wound. After treating the wound the scalp being closed and bandaged. Private Wilmer after recovering from the injury. He walks out of the hospital after being discharged.
A U.S. Navy training film titled 'Early care of plastic surgery cases: wounds of hands' about the treatment of hand injuries of American soldiers during World War II. Hands of a conductor as he conducts an orchestra. Hands of various men as they work on machines, typewriter, reads braille, load shells in an artillery. Animation depicts the different parts of a human hand. Blood vessels in the hand.
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