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TROPICAL DISEASES

JAMA. 1909;LIII(5):386. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.02550050052005.
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ABSTRACT

The address by Dr. McElroy that appears in this issue, besides being a comprehensive review of the recent advances in our knowledge of tropical diseases, emphasizes a need that is becoming more and more obvious, viz.: the necessity of more attention being given in our country to instruction and research in these diseases. In the British Isles they have already more than one institution specially devoted to this subject, and France and Germany, the other chief colonizing countries, are also similarly provided. We should not lag behind; our interest in the tropics is by no means inconsiderable, and we have even in our home territory large regions that are subject to the invasion of tropical diseases and which afford a favorable soil for their development and spread. Uncinariasis, which is generally counted among the tropical diseases, is endemic in our southern states, and the necessity of our recognizing its existence

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