Box 9
Contains 282 Results:
Telegram from Wickliffe Rose to Henry Rose Carter, December 6, 1921
Receipt for book order.
Letter from Henry Hanson to Henry Rose Carter, December 6, 1921
Hanson refutes Dr. Arces' theory that yellow fever does not exist in Peru. He expresses confidence in the work being done.
Letter from Lunsford D. Fricks to Henry Rose Carter, December 9, 1921
Fricks seeks Carter's advice on how to publish comprehensive malaria bulletin.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Wickliffe Rose, December 13, 1921
Carter discusses the history of yellow fever in South America.
Letter from Wickliffe Rose to Henry Rose Carter, December 17, 1921
Rose expresses great interest in publishing a story on yellow fever.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Lunsford D. Fricks, December 24, 1921
[Carter] does not see the need to write another systematic treatise on malaria control. He suggests two different alternatives.
Letter from C.C. Pierce to Henry Rose Carter, December 28, 1921
Pierce thanks Carter for his paper on yellow fever.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Wickliffe Rose, December 29, 1921
Carter requests that Rose proofread his Spanish translation of an article sent to him by Hanson.
Letter from Hideyo Noguchi to Henry Rose Carter, December 30, 1921
Noguchi informs Carter of the death, by yellow fever, of Cross - one of Noguchi's laboratory assistants. Cross had been sent to Mexico without being properly immunized. Noguchi openly questions the actions of the doctors who attended to Cross in Mexico.
Letter to Hideyo Noguchi, December 31, 1921
Clinical Blood Findings in Yellow Fever, by J. Birney Guthrie, M.D. and R.T. Perkins, M.D., circa 1921
This is a detailed report on clinical findings regarding yellow fever.
Special Measures Against Yellow Fever at Ports of Arrival (Domestic and Insular), circa 1921
The report outlines special measures to screen passengers, including quarantine procedures and possible hospitalization.
Yellow fever, by Henry Rose Carter, circa 1921
Detailed report on the history of yellow fever by H.R. Carter which includes areas such as geographical distribution, etiology, conveyance, pathology, clinical history, diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, and prophylaxis.
Letter from Henry Hanson to Henry Rose Carter, circa 1921
Hanson requests a copy of Carter's article on the incubation period of yellow fever, from 1900.
La fiebre amarilla, by Henry Rose Carter, March 26, 1914
Carter discusses the transmission, spread and containment of yellow fever.
Control of Malaria by Control of the Human Host
, by [Henry Rose Carter], circa 1921
[Carter] details various methods of controlling malaria. He discusses segregation, screening, mosquito bars, and the use of quinine. [Carter] favors mosquito control because it does not require modification of human behavior.
Impounded Waters
, by Joseph Augustine LePrince, circa 1921
LePrince describes mosquito breeding in impounded waters, suggesting necessary regulations to be implemented by State Boards of Health.
Regulations Governing the Impounding of Waters
, by the Alabama State Board of Health, circa 1921
This report discusses control of debris and vegetation, fish stocking, and ditching. Pertinent state health laws are listed.
Letter fragment from [Henry Rose Carter?]to Henry Hanson, January 1, 1922
[Carter?] writes to Hanson that he recalls balancing accounts in Piura, Peru on this day last year.
Letter from Hideyo Noguchi to Henry Rose Carter, January 3, 1922
Noguchi sends Carter eight ampoules of yellow fever vaccine and directions for its use.