Tropical medicine
Found in 724 Collections and/or Records:
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, February 27, 1915
Blue requests that Carter review a proposed law on mosquito control.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, October 28, 1915
Blue orders Carter to investigate a fever outbreak in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, December 22, 1915
Blue orders Carter to attend the Pan-American Scientific Congress.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 19, 1916
Blue informs Carter that the dates for the lectures on yellow fever and malaria are satisfactory.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 20, 1916
Blue orders Carter to proceed to Washington to deliver lectures on yellow fever and malaria.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 24, 1916
Blue requests that Carter present a paper for the American Society of Tropical Medicine meeting.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, June 5, 1919
Blue sends Carter to Atlantic City, New Jersey to present a paper at a yellow fever symposium.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 7, 1920
Blue orders Carter to go to Florida to assist in the control of malaria.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 27, 1920
Blue requests that Carter assist in the revision of U.S. quarantine regulations.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, April 28, 1916
Blue orders Carter to deliver an address on malaria in Newport News, Virginia.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, May 8, 1916
Blue orders Carter to confer with Dinwiddie County, Virginia, health officials in regards to anti-malarial measures.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, April 28, 1916
Blue directs Carter to proceed to the South in order to investigate the relationship between impounded waters and malaria.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, April 28, 1916
Blue orders Carter to participate in the meetings of the National Malarial Committee and the American Society of Tropical Medicine, as well as to continue his investigation of impounded waters.
Letter from S. M. Sparkman to George Miller Sternberg, June 13, 1901
Sparkman encourages the printing of several thousand copies of “The Etiology of Yellow Fever” so that the people of the Gulf Coast can be informed of the mosquito theory. Sparkman realizes that it is very important that the yellow fever issue be cleared up, as there are numerous variant theories about the cause of yellow fever.
Letter from Samuel T. Darling to Frederick F. Russell, March 30, 1923
Darling discusses the pathological reports of a possible yellow fever case in Lagos, Nigeria.
Letter from Samuel T. Darling to Frederick F. Russell, March 30, 1923
Darling discusses the pathological reports of a possible yellow fever case in Lagos, Nigeria.
Letter from Samuel Taylor Darling to Henry Rose Carter, December 22, 1924
Darling discusses pneumonia in South Africa and its transmission. He mentions the recent malaria conference and the paper that he presented.
Letter from Sarah Hinds Wilder to Henry Rose Carter, December 26, 1915
Wilder expresses her appreciation for Carter's work.
Letter from Sidney R. Simon to Henry Rose Carter, June 26, 1919
Simon informs Carter that he will publish his yellow fever paper from the Atlantic City, New Jersey symposium.
Letter from S.J. Denno to Wickliffe Rose, December 13, 1922
Denno describes the unusual yellow fever case of seaman John Cose. Denno would like Noguchi to examine Cose in New York.