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SOME REASONS WHY A SCHOOL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE SHOULD BE ESTABLISHED IN THE UNITED STATES

J. A. NYDEGGER, M.D.
JAMA. 1909;LIII(20):1620-1622. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.92550200001001d.
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ABSTRACT

While secretary of the state for colonies the late Joseph Chamberlain, of England, with the object of affording instruction in tropical medicine to medical officers in the colonial service, caused to be established in London a special school of tropical medicine. Previous to its inception there was no adequate means whereby private practitioners or medical missionaries about to proceed to the tropics could acquire special information concerning, or obtain practical instruction in, an important section of the diseases they would be called on to treat. Had the school been confined to the training of those about to enter the colonial government service, the scheme would have been bereft of much of its usefulness, and the natives and European residents in the colonies and dependencies would have suffered accordingly.

As I write these lines there lies before me the prospectus of the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and

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