Hospital Treatment.
Hospital treatment is again and again described favourably in the individual reports (e.g., pp. [4], [6], [14], [22], [50], [57]), but the opinion may here be cited of a Swiss doctor who has been occupied in German hospitals during most of the war:
The writer of these lines never saw anything anywhere that could be considered as intentional change for the worse in the lot of prisoners and sick; on the contrary, he was able to ascertain that the prisoners and the sick are treated in a manner that could not be more humane. If later on the food was insufficient, the English must be aware of the reasons which brought about far-reaching starvation among great circles of the population of Germany.... From deepest conviction the writer of these lines affirms that the German people and the German doctors are [generally] without guilt in the face of the accusations made against them. Individual exceptions, if proved, could not alter this judgment.