reports
Found in 332 Collections and/or Records:
Report of Commission on Cross Infections in Hospitals, by the United States Army Board for the Investigation of Epidemic Diseases, May 6, 1943
Report of Committee on the Etiology of Yellow Fever
,Proceedings of the American Public Health Association, October 1900
Horlbeck concludes in this report to the American Public Health Association that the bacillus icteroides, discovered by Sanarelli, is the cause of yellow fever.
Report of departure by Walter Reed for the United States Army, April 1, 1892
The slip states that Reed is accompanying two companies as a medical officer to the Sisseton and Wappeton Indian Reservation. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Report of Malaria Investigations Made during November 1916 and Subsequent Anti-Malaria Campaign in Kress, Virginia April 1st-June 30th, 1917, December 15, 1917
Snidow details malaria investigations in Virginia.
Report of Progress in Discharging Our Nation's Debt of Honor to Those Yellow Fever Heroes of 1900, 1928
Report of the Activities of the United States Public Health Service in the Camp Meade Extra Cantonment Zone, June 30, 1919
This report details the Army's mosquito control operations around Camp Meade, Maryland.
Report of the Health Department of the Panama Canal for the Calendar Year 1917, by Albert E. Truby, 1918
Report of the Secretary of Justice [Cuba] from July 1, 1899-June 30, 1900, 1900
Report of the Surgeon General, September 6, 1902
This report documents yellow fever cases in the Army for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1902.
Report of the Surgeon-General of the Army for the Year Ending June 30, 1899, 1899
Report of the Surgeon General of the Army to the Secretary of War, June 30, 1888-June 30, 1893
Includes reports from Walter Reed at Fort Robinson, Nebraska.
Report of the Surgeon General to the Secretary of War for the Fiscal Year Ending June 30, 1904, June 30, 1904
O'Reilly reports on the cases of yellow fever in the Army, and is concerned about the transmission of the disease from Mexico into Texas.
Report of the Yellow Fever Commission, April 3, 1901
The Yellow Fever Commission examines Ole A. Jensen and pronounces his illness as yellow fever. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Report of the Yellow Fever Commission, April 11, 1901
The Yellow Fever Commission examines potential cases of yellow fever at Morro 58. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Report of the Yellow Fever Commission, April 22, 1901
The commission examines potential cases of yellow fever at Las Animas Hospital. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Report of the Yellow Fever Commission, April 23, 1901
The commission examines cases of potential yellow fever at Las Animas Hospital. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Report of the Yellow Fever Commission, April 27, 1901
The commission examines cases of yellow fever at Las Animas Hospital and Benefica. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Report of the Yellow Fever Commission, April 30, 1901
The commission examines cases of yellow fever at Las Animas Hospital. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Report of the Yellow Fever Commission, May 8, 1901
The commission examines cases of yellow fever at San La zaro, Cuba. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Report of the Yellow Fever Commission, May 10, 1901
The commission examines cases of yellow fever at Las Animas Hospital. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]