Tropical medicine
Found in 724 Collections and/or Records:
Letter from L.O. Howard to Howard A. Kelly, November 2, 1906
Howard sends Kelly copies of two letters from Reed.
Letter from Louis L. Williams, Jr., to Henry Rose Carter, January 29, 1920
Williams discusses the value of money in relation to the work in the Public Health Service.
Letter from Lunsford D. Fricks to Henry Rose Carter, October 26, 1921
Fricks apologizes for his efforts to convince Carter to attend the Hot Spring malaria meeting.
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 M.A. Barber to Henry Rose Carter, May 2, 1924
Barber sends Carter copies of articles on malaria. LePrince reports that mosquito control on the Mexican border is going well.
Letter from M.A. Barber to Henry Rose Carter, August 4, 1925
Barber discusses his upcoming personal and professional plans.
Letter from Mark F. Boyd to Henry Rose Carter, April 14, 1924
Boyd refers to two excerpts from Goeldis' theory on the African origin of Stegomyia fasciata.
Letter from Michael E. Connor to Henry Rose Carter, May 24, 1921
Connor comments on Hanson's and Pareja's work in Peru. He also discusses issues related to yellow fever work in Mexico.
Letter from Michael E. Connor to Henry Rose Carter, May 3, 1922
Connor recommends continued vigilance for at least six months after the last confirmed case of yellow fever. He discusses the political situation in Mexico, noting that the Tampico office is closing.
Letter from Michael E. Connor to Henry Rose Carter, May 30, 1922
Connor discusses field work and a difficult case, in San Cristobal. Connor is worried that yellow fever's demise in Peru will be announced too soon.
Letter from Michael E. Connor to Henry Rose Carter, June 29, 1924
Connor describes an unknown fever in Dutch Guiana. He discusses the prevalence of Aedes stegomyia and the types of water storage used in the area.
Letter from Michael E. Connor to Henry Rose Carter, July 26, 1922
Connor discusses the campaign against yellow fever in Mexico, which he plans to finish soon. He thanks Carter for the critique of his manuscript.
Letter from Michael E. Connor to Henry Rose Carter, December 14, 1922
Connor reports on yellow fever in Mexico. He suspects a Caribbean epidemic spreading from Brazil.
Letter from Michael E. Connor to Henry Rose Carter, February 4, 1923
Connor reports extensively on the yellow fever campaign in Mexico.
Letter from Michael E. Connor to Laura Armistead Carter, October 24, 1920
Connor writes that he has seen Henry Carter and praises his yellow fever work in Peru. He requests two of Carter's reports.
Letter from Miguel Roldan to Philip Showalter Hench, January 11, 1954
Roldan is working on a biography of Finlay that will demonstrate Finlay's major role in the discovery of the cause of yellow fever.
Letter from N. P. Macphail to P. F. Murphy, December 21, 1923
Macphail gives Murphy some history on the man who died of malaria shortly after leaving a ship in Havana.
Letter from N. Paul Hudson to Emilie Lawrence Reed, November 5, 1936
Hudson sends Emilie Lawrence Reed a program from the annual meeting of the American Society of Tropical Medicine. He invites her to attend the meeting, where she will be presented with the Walter Reed medal.
Letter from N.P. Stewart to Howard A. Kelly, February 20, 1907
Stewart praises Kelly's book. He suggests corrections for clarification, and notes that he would emphasize the role of the Public Health Service.
Letter from P. Farshish to the Editor ofThe Baltimore News, May 10, 1905
Farshish writes the editor to correct what he thinks is misinformation in Kelly's article about the earliest documented reference of insects carrying disease. Farshish challenges Kelly with references from the Talmud and Midroshic Literature.