Skip to main content

Diseases

 Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings

Found in 827 Collections and/or Records:

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to William E. Deeks,  September 8, 1924

 Item — Box 12: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 12
Identifier: 01212005
Scope and Contents

Carter comments on how to minimize the malaria problem. He recommends an article to Deeks.

Dates:  September 8, 1924

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to William E. Deeks,  January 25, 1925

 Item — Box 12: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 20
Identifier: 01220013
Scope and Contents

[Carter] discusses mosquito breeding in containers and wells, and the use of quinine injections.

Dates:  January 25, 1925

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to William E. Deeks,  March 21, 1925

 Item — Box 12: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 22
Identifier: 01222009
Scope and Contents

[Carter] comments on Deeks' monograph on malaria, and he suggests changes.

Dates:  March 21, 1925

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to W.S. Leathers,  March 23, 1923

 Item — Box 10: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 22
Identifier: 01022023
Scope and Contents

Carter informs Leathers about his career in malaria and yellow fever control and the careers of others prominent in the field.

Dates:  March 23, 1923

Letter from Henry W. Woltman to John H. Andrus,  March 23, 1938

 Item — Box 34: Series uva-lib:2225888, Folder: 58
Identifier: 03458003
Scope and Contents

Woltman gives Andrus medical advice, suggesting that neither yellow fever nor arthritis are the cause of his condition.

Dates:  March 23, 1938

Letter from Hideyo Noguchi to Florence M. Read,  November 9, 1923

 Item — Box 11: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 21
Identifier: 01121003
Scope and Contents

Noguchi discusses possible yellow fever cases and sends reports.

Dates:  November 9, 1923

Letter from Hideyo Noguchi to Frederick F. Russell,  March 7, 1923

 Item — Box 10: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 22
Identifier: 01022013
Scope and Contents

Noguchi discusses an Ecuadorean fever case that might be yellow fever.

Dates:  March 7, 1923

Letter from Hideyo Noguchi to Frederick F. Russell,  September 19, 1923

 Item — Box 11: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 17
Identifier: 01117020
Scope and Contents

Noguchi thinks the liver sections and the clinical aspects of the deceased patient do not support a diagnosis of yellow fever.

Dates:  September 19, 1923

Letter from Hideyo Noguchi to Frederick F. Russell,  September 20, 1923

 Item — Box 11: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 17
Identifier: 01117021
Scope and Contents

Noguchi is sending a report on liver sections from a suspected yellow fever patient.

Dates:  September 20, 1923

Letter from Hideyo Noguchi to R.B. Howland,  October 30, 1922

 Item — Box 10: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 21
Identifier: 01021004
Scope and Contents

Noguchi thanks Howland for Comstock's letter and comments on the fever cases in Brazil.

Dates:  October 30, 1922

Letter from Hideyo Noguchi to Wickliffe Rose,  February 10, 1923

 Item — Box 10: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 21
Identifier: 01021052
Scope and Contents

Noguchi gives his opinion on a possible infectious jaundice case in Guayaquil, and requests clinical data.

Dates:  February 10, 1923

Letter from Hideyo Noguchi to W.J. Denno,  January 5, 1923

 Item — Box 10: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 18
Identifier: 01018012
Scope and Contents

Noguchi reports to Denno on the unusual yellow fever case of seaman Cose. He believes Cose did not have yellow fever and asks for clinical records on the case.

Dates:  January 5, 1923

Letter from Hideyo Noguchi to W.J. Denno,  January 6, 1923

 Item — Box 10: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 18
Identifier: 01018013
Scope and Contents

Noguchi reports to Denno on the physical examination of the suspected yellow fever case, John Cose.

Dates:  January 6, 1923

Letter from H.J. Martinez to Laura Armistead Carter,  February 14, 1932

 Item — Box 13: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 9
Identifier: 01309001
Scope and Contents

Martinez thanks Miss Carter for the copy of her father's book and discusses theories of disease in Mayan Mexico.

Dates:  February 14, 1932

Letter from Howard A. Kelly to Henry Rose Carter,  September 27, 1923

 Item — Box 11: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 17
Identifier: 01117025
Scope and Contents

Kelly sends Carter a copy of his Walter Reed book. He notes the credit given Carter's work in Ross' memoirs and asks for photos of Carter to include in a collection of malaria and yellow fever literature he is gathering for the School of Hygiene, in Baltimore.

Dates:  September 27, 1923

Letter from Hugh Cunningham to Emilie Lawrence Reed,  May 31, 1927

 Item — Box 31: Series uva-lib:2223908, Folder: 22
Identifier: 03122024
Scope and Contents

This letter, written by a student of Edith R. Force, thanks Emilie Lawrence Reed for the life and work of Walter Reed.

Dates:  May 31, 1927

Letter from Hugh S. Cumming to Laura Armistead Carter,  October 14, 1925

 Item — Box 11: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 19
Identifier: 01119007
Scope and Contents

Cumming has the impression that Henry Rose Carter told Reed about his extrinsic incubation theory and asks Laura Carter if her father's work influenced Reed. An autograph note by Laura Carter attests to the influence of her father's work on Reed.

Dates:  October 14, 1925

Letter from Ida E. Kissinger to James E. Peabody,  February 4, 1927

 Item — Box 31: Series uva-lib:2223908, Folder: 11
Identifier: 03111002

Letter from Ida E. Kissinger to Jefferson Randolph Kean,  August 4, 1941

 Item — Box 63: Series uva-lib:2229588, Folder: 6
Identifier: 06306013
Scope and Contents

Kissinger plans to nurse her husband at home and thanks Kean for the information about the veteran's hospital.

Dates:  August 4, 1941