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SANITATION OF THE CIAL REFERENCE YELLOW TROPICS WITH SPETO MALARIA AND FEVER

WILLIAM C. GORGAS, M.D.
JAMA. 1909;LII(14):1075-1077. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.25420400001001.
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ABSTRACT

If we go back to the year 1898 and consider the point of view of Europeans and their American descendants about to enter the tropics, yellow fever to them was by far the most dangerous disease with which they were likely to come in contact. I am referring now principally to the American tropics, as yellow fever affected principally this region. And this was particularly the case when it was intended to send large bodies of nonimmune persons, such as our army of occupation in Cuba. Yellow fever had caused more disaster to military expeditions going to these tropics than had all the other tropical diseases put together, and it had been equally fatal to non-immune individuals in civil life. Our military surgeons, therefore, in their sanitary recommendations considered more particularly this disease.

Yellow fever frequently affected the southern portions of the United States, and military surgeons were very confident

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