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1.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis ; 15(12): e0009908, 2021 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34882670

ABSTRACT

In 1896, a serendipitous laboratory accident led to the understanding that hookworms propagate infection by penetrating skin, a theory that was then confirmed with the first experimental human infection, reported in 1901. Experimental human infections undertaken in the 20th century enabled understanding of the natural history of infection and the immune response. More recently, experimental hookworm infection has been performed to investigate the immunomodulatory potential of hookworm infection and for the evaluation of hookworm vaccines and chemotherapeutic interventions. Experimental human hookworm infection has been proven to be safe, with no deaths observed in over 500 participants (although early reports predate systematic adverse event reporting) and no serious adverse events described in over 200 participants enrolled in contemporary clinical trials. While experimental human hookworm infection holds significant promise, as both a challenge model for testing anti-hookworm therapies and for treating various diseases of modernity, there are many challenges that present. These challenges include preparation and storage of larvae, which has not significantly changed since Harada and Mori first described their coproculture method in 1955. In vitro methods of hookworm larval culture, storage, and the development of meaningful potency or release assays are required. Surrogate markers of intestinal infection intensity are required because faecal egg counts or hookworm faecal DNA intensity lack the fidelity required for exploration of hookworm infection as a vaccine/drug testing platform or as a regulated therapy.


Subject(s)
Hookworm Infections/history , Human Experimentation/history , Ancylostomatoidea/pathogenicity , Animals , Antigens, Helminth/immunology , Feces/parasitology , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Hookworm Infections/immunology , Hookworm Infections/parasitology , Humans , Research/history , Vaccines/immunology
2.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 27(suppl 1): 13-28, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32997055

ABSTRACT

The subdiscipline of historical epidemiology holds the promise of creating a more robust and more nuanced foundation for global public health decision-making by deepening the empirical record from which we draw lessons about past interventions. This essay draws upon historical epidemiological research on three global public health campaigns to illustrate this promise: the Rockefeller Foundation's efforts to control hookworm disease (1909-c.1930), the World Health Organization's pilot projects for malaria eradication in tropical Africa (1950s-1960s), and the international efforts to shut down the transmission of Ebola virus disease during outbreaks in tropical Africa (1974-2019).


Subject(s)
Epidemiology/history , Global Health/history , Health Promotion/history , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/history , Hookworm Infections/history , Malaria/history , Africa , Communicable Disease Control/history , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/prevention & control , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/transmission , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Humans , Malaria/prevention & control , Public Health Practice/history , World Health Organization/history
3.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 27(supl.1): 13-28, Sept. 2020.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1134098

ABSTRACT

Abstract The subdiscipline of historical epidemiology holds the promise of creating a more robust and more nuanced foundation for global public health decision-making by deepening the empirical record from which we draw lessons about past interventions. This essay draws upon historical epidemiological research on three global public health campaigns to illustrate this promise: the Rockefeller Foundation's efforts to control hookworm disease (1909-c.1930), the World Health Organization's pilot projects for malaria eradication in tropical Africa (1950s-1960s), and the international efforts to shut down the transmission of Ebola virus disease during outbreaks in tropical Africa (1974-2019).


Resumo A subdisciplina epidemiologia histórica se propõe a criar um alicerce robusto e refinado para o processo de tomada de decisões em saúde pública global, aprofundando registros empíricos que nos ensinam sobre intervenções passadas. Este artigo se baseia na pesquisa epidemiológica histórica de três campanhas globais de saúde pública para ilustrar essa proposta: os esforços da Fundação Rockefeller para controle da ancilostomose (1909-c.1930), os projetos-piloto da Organização Mundial da Saúde para erradicação da malária na África tropical (décadas de 1950-1960), e os esforços internacionais de interrupção da transmissão do vírus Ebola durante surtos na África tropical (1974-2019).


Subject(s)
Humans , History, 20th Century , Global Health/history , Epidemiology/history , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/history , Health Promotion/history , Hookworm Infections/history , Malaria/history , World Health Organization/history , Public Health Practice/history , Communicable Disease Control/history , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/prevention & control , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/transmission , Africa , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Malaria/prevention & control
5.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 22(4): 1427-39, 2015 Dec.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26625923

ABSTRACT

The pharmacist Theodoro Peckolt was one of the most important figures in the history of the chemistry of natural Brazilian products. Like other nineteenth-century pharmacists in Brazil, he developed formulations and sold them at his pharmacy in Rio de Janeiro, and these enjoyed great prestige in the eyes both of the public and the medical community. The article discusses the relation between the illness originally called "opilação" (ancylostomiasis, or hookworm) and nineteenth-century treatment. It focuses especially on Peckolt Pharmacy's "Doliarina and iron powder," a formulation extracted from the Ficus gomelleira rubber plant. One of the article's goals is to use modern methods to analyze Ficus gomelleira and identify the chemical composition of the drug.


Subject(s)
Antinematodal Agents/history , Ficus/chemistry , Hookworm Infections/history , Pharmacies/history , Animals , Antinematodal Agents/chemistry , Antinematodal Agents/therapeutic use , Brazil , History, 19th Century , Hookworm Infections/drug therapy , Humans , Iron/history , Iron/therapeutic use , Pharmacists/history
6.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 22(4): 1427-1439, out.-dez. 2015. graf
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-767019

ABSTRACT

Resumo O farmacêutico Theodoro Peckolt é uma das mais importantes figuras da história da química de produtos naturais brasileira. Como outros farmacêuticos do século XIX que atuavam no Brasil, desenvolveu formulações que comercializava em sua farmácia, localizada no Rio de Janeiro, e que tiveram grande prestígio junto à população e à classe médica. O texto apresenta a relação entre a doença identificada inicialmente como opilação e a terapêutica utilizada no século XIX, destacando uma das formulações da Farmácia Peckolt – “Pós de doliarina e ferro”. O produto tem sua origem no látex da espécie Ficus gomelleira(figueira-branca ou gameleira). O artigo tem entre seus objetivos revelar a composição química, feita por métodos modernos de análise do látex deFicus gomelleira.


Abstract The pharmacist Theodoro Peckolt was one of the most important figures in the history of the chemistry of natural Brazilian products. Like other nineteenth-century pharmacists in Brazil, he developed formulations and sold them at his pharmacy in Rio de Janeiro, and these enjoyed great prestige in the eyes both of the public and the medical community. The article discusses the relation between the illness originally called “opilação” (ancylostomiasis, or hookworm) and nineteenth-century treatment. It focuses especially on Peckolt Pharmacy’s “Doliarina and iron powder,” a formulation extracted from the Ficus gomelleira rubber plant. One of the article’s goals is to use modern methods to analyze Ficus gomelleira and identify the chemical composition of the drug.


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , History, 19th Century , Pharmacies/history , Ficus/chemistry , Hookworm Infections/history , Antinematodal Agents/history , Pharmacists/history , Brazil , Hookworm Infections/drug therapy , Iron/history , Iron/therapeutic use , Antinematodal Agents/therapeutic use , Antinematodal Agents/chemistry
7.
Am J Public Health ; 104(1): 47-58, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24228676

ABSTRACT

The Rockefeller Sanitary Commission for the Eradication of Hookworm Disease (1909-1914) fielded a philanthropic public health project that had three goals: to estimate hookworm prevalence in the American South, provide treatment, and eradicate the disease. Activities covered 11 Southern states, and Rockefeller teams found that about 40% of the population surveyed was infected. However, the commission met strong resistance and lacked the time and resources to achieve universal county coverage and meet project goals. We explore how these constraints triggered project changes that systematically reshaped project operations and the characteristics of the counties surveyed and treated. We show that county selectivity reduced the project's initial potential to affect hookworm prevalence estimates, treatment, and eradication in the American South.


Subject(s)
Hookworm Infections/history , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Public Health Practice/history , Sanitation/history , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/epidemiology , Humans , Prevalence , Southeastern United States/epidemiology
8.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 21(4): 1437-55, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25606734

ABSTRACT

In 1915 the Rockefeller Foundation took its hookworm eradication campaign to Suriname, but was soon disappointed because of opposition from its main target group: the Javanese. Moreover, authorities and planters objected to the construction of latrines because of the costs and their belief that the Javanese were "unhygienic". In describing the labor migration from Java to Suriname, I show that this "lack of hygiene" was closely related to the system's organization. I argue that uncleanliness was the consequence of harmful socio-economic and ecological conditions. Secondly I suggest that even though the Foundation did not manage to cleanse Suriname of hookworm, its educational efforts, its emphasis on prevention, and its training of local health workers probably had more impact than Rockefeller officials thought.


Subject(s)
Hookworm Infections/history , Hygiene/history , Sanitation/history , Foundations/history , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Humans , Indonesia/ethnology , International Cooperation , Suriname , Transients and Migrants , United States
9.
Acta Trop ; 120(1-2): 24-30, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21791196

ABSTRACT

Like other countries around the globe where conditions existed for the parasites causing hookworm disease to thrive, this disease was a serious problem to settlers in countries of the Commonwealth Caribbean, i.e. those countries that were formerly part of the British Empire. Early in the 20th century, the Rockefeller Foundation (RF) assisted the southern United States in controlling this disease. Soon other countries requested assistance and the Rockefeller Foundation responded by creating their International Health Commission to target the problem. Guyana (then British Guiana) was the first country where work was started. Through a system of chemotherapy, sanitation with the provision of latrines and health education the RF assisted the Commonwealth Caribbean countries during the period 1914-1925 in controlling the disease. Most countries continued the programmes started by the Rockefeller Foundation and this paper provides evidence through a series of surveys to show that hookworm disease is no longer a public health problem.


Subject(s)
Foundations/history , Hookworm Infections , International Agencies/history , International Cooperation/history , Public Health , Ancylostomatoidea , Animals , Caribbean Region/epidemiology , Guyana/epidemiology , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/history , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Humans , Public Health/history , Public Health/methods , United States/epidemiology
11.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 28(6): 1734-44, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19887414

ABSTRACT

Four major diseases stigmatized the American South in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: yellow fever, malaria, hookworm, and pellagra. Each disease contributed to the inhibition of economic growth in the South, and the latter three severely affected children's development and adult workers' productivity. However, all four had largely disappeared from the region by 1950. This paper analyzes the reasons for this disappearance. It describes the direct effects of public health interventions and the indirect effects of prosperity and other facets of economic development. It also offers insights into the invaluable benefits that could be gained if today's neglected diseases were also eliminated.


Subject(s)
Hookworm Infections/history , Malaria/history , Pellagra/history , Public Health/history , Yellow Fever/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Humans , Malaria/prevention & control , Pellagra/prevention & control , Southeastern United States , Yellow Fever/prevention & control
12.
J Epidemiol Community Health ; 63(8): 670-4, 2009 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19359273

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In Spain, hookworm was first recognised as a miners' disease, becoming the goal of one of the most successful interventions in public health from 1912 to 1931. Hookworm also played a part in the growing interest in rural health problems that peaked during the Republican period (1931-6). The aim of this study was to compare the rationale and content of public health interventions against rural hookworm in Spain before the Civil War (1936-9) with those of interventions after the war. METHODS: Review of published and unpublished documents on hookworm produced by individual physicians and public health officials in the first half of the 20th century. RESULTS: Rural hookworm foci detected in pre-war years were explained in terms of the geographical and human environment and largely attributed to poor working and living conditions, prompting specific health campaigns. New rural foci were detected after the war, but this time the health administration did not intervene. Understanding of the disease changed, its impact on reproduction was highlighted and medical explanations pointed to the negative moral conditions of peasants rather than social issues. CONCLUSION: Civil War brought rupture and continuity to the public health domain. Although the Francoist health administration preserved similar organisation patterns, its practice was governed by different priorities. Moral and even religious positions provided a rationale for what had been previously explained in social and environmental terms. This approach, together with the perception of hookworm as evidence of backwardness, led to official neglect of the condition, which was still prevalent in some rural areas.


Subject(s)
Hookworm Infections/history , Public Health/history , Rural Health/history , Warfare , Animals , Health Policy/history , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Humans , Spain
13.
Bull Hist Med ; 83(4): 676-709, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20061670

ABSTRACT

This article proposes a global history of hookworm disease based on the main scientific publications on hookworm disease (ankylostomiasis) in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and archival sources from the Rockefeller Foundation's International Health Board. The location of hookworm research is explained by the presence of large concentrations of migrant laborers who suffered from serious hookworm disease in frontier regions during the second industrial revolution. This hookworm disease pandemic was not the result of a linear spread of infection. The extraordinary labor conditions in these regions created ideal ecologies for the reproduction of the parasite, leading to levels of infection that produced ankylostomiasis. The major findings in hookworm science came from research-oriented physicians building new institutions of medical science in peripheral nation-states. In a number of Latin American states their work led to treatment programs conceived in national terms that preceded the interest of Rockefeller philanthropy in the disease. The Rockefeller Foundation incorporated these programs in order to launch its International Health hookworm eradication program in 1914.


Subject(s)
Disease Outbreaks/history , Hookworm Infections/history , Internationality/history , Transients and Migrants/history , Animals , Biomedical Research/history , Foundations/history , Global Health , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/epidemiology , Humans
14.
Can Bull Med Hist ; 25(1): 43-69, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18831143

ABSTRACT

The article presents views from above and below of the Rockefeller Foundation's International Health Commission's (IHC's) hookworm control program in Nicaragua from 1914 to 1928. It looks at the meaning, impact, and unique configuration of the Nicaraguan mission, while taking into account the larger global institutional project of this important international health actor. Although the IHC program in Nicaragua complemented some of the social policy goals of the US intervention in Nicaragua, which was a de facto protectorate during this period, the institution cannot be considered a direct expression or agent of US foreign policy. Ultimately the shape and limits of the IHC mission to Nicaragua were determined by the institutional project of the international public health agency itself, and by local considerations ranging from the characteristics of the staff to the response of rural communities to the anti-hookworm campaigns.


Subject(s)
Foundations/history , Hookworm Infections/history , Medical Missions/history , Public Health/history , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Humans , Nicaragua , Politics , United States
16.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 13(3): 571-89, 2006.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17115527

ABSTRACT

The earliest programs of the Rockefeller Foundation's International Health Commission - IHC were pilot projects for the treatment of hookworm disease in the British colonies of British Guiana and Trinidad. These pioneering ventures into international health have often been portrayed as governed by rigid biomedical principles. In contrast to this view, the article emphasizes the degree to which the exigencies of a public health project that sought to make biomedicine intelligible within the medical systems of subject populations combined with the knowledge of local IHC staff members of Indo-Caribbean descent to generate some fascinating experiments in ethno-medical translation. One term in particular "The Demon that Turned into Worms" is focused on to show how these efforts at medical translation may have legitimized and promoted medical pluralism.


Subject(s)
Global Health , Hookworm Infections , International Agencies , International Cooperation , Public Health , Animals , Anthropology, Cultural/history , Anthropology, Cultural/methods , Ethnicity/ethnology , Ethnicity/history , Guyana/epidemiology , Guyana/ethnology , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/history , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Humans , International Agencies/history , International Cooperation/history , Medicine, Traditional/history , Necator americanus/parasitology , Public Health/history , Public Health/methods , Trinidad and Tobago/epidemiology , Trinidad and Tobago/ethnology
17.
Med Lav ; 97(2): 114-23, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17017334

ABSTRACT

Similarly to Daniele Pometta (1869-1949) on the northern front, Giuseppe Volante (1870-1936) from Turin, a valid clinician and hygiene expert was the field doctor for the firm of Brandt, Brandau e C., on the southern part of the Simplon tunnel for the whole period of its excavation (1898-1906). He meticulously organised and carried out with determination the main mission entrusted him which was to prevent the hookworm epidemic which a mere twenty years earlier had cast its shadow over the St. Gotthard tunnel. Volante also authoritatively directed the first aid post and the hospital that the company built at Nante. Evidence of Volante's vast medical experience was seen in the scientific works he published as well as in a report published in the acts of the International Conference on Work-related Illnesses (Volante, 1906a) and then in a comunication at No. 3 Italian Congress on Work-related Illnesses in Turin (Volante, 1911). There are three interesting works reproduced here (Volante, 1906b-c-d) which are substantially aimed at a broad readership and which clearly illustrate the work carried out, the experience gained and also the author's cultural background. Volante's remarks and the data he supplies are "official" but show no sign of partiality; they convey the grandness of the work he contributed towards creating and in some ways also the "generosity" of the company towards the labour force who "only" went on strike three times for better pay, fewer hours and improved working conditions. Volante's opinion on the low morbidity and mortality of the workers is certainly motivated although it is still relative, first and foremost because he had the tragedy of the St Gotthard as a yardstick, but also because it was swayed by the idea, widespread at the time, of fatalism about the potentially negative effects of the type of work. During the International Conference in 1906 Violante was awarded a gold medal for the work he had conducted, and for three years afterwards he worked under Luigi Devoto (1864-1936) in Milan. After that, he returned to his native Turin where he practised urology. According to his direct descendents, he died aged 64 from respiratory insufficiency the causes of which included a "pneumoconiosis" diagnosed by Prof. Quarelli (1881-1954), a renowned doctor of work-related illnesses, which he had obviously contracted in the period when he had been the doctor of the miners (Gius Volante, 2006).


Subject(s)
Accidents, Occupational , Mining/history , Occupational Diseases/history , Occupational Medicine/history , Transients and Migrants/history , Accidents, Occupational/economics , Accidents, Occupational/mortality , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Cultural Characteristics , Disease Outbreaks/history , Ethnicity/psychology , Family Relations , Female , France/epidemiology , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/history , Hookworm Infections/mortality , Housing , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Italy/epidemiology , Life Style , Male , Middle Aged , Mining/economics , Occupational Diseases/economics , Occupational Diseases/mortality , Poverty , Schools/history , Social Values , Switzerland/epidemiology , Transients and Migrants/psychology
18.
South Med J ; 99(8): 862-4, 2006 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16929881

ABSTRACT

The early 20th century Southerner lived in a disease environment created by a confluence of poverty, climate and the legacy of slavery. A deadly trio of pellagra, hookworm and malaria enervated the poor Southerner--man, woman and child--creating a dull, weakened people ill equipped to prosper in the modem world. The Northern perceptions of the South as a backward and sickly region were only compounded by the realization that her population was malnourished, infected by worms, and continually plagued by agues and fevers. As historian John Duffy concluded, "As a chronically debilitating disease, it [malaria] shared with the other two the responsibility for the term 'lazy Southerner".


Subject(s)
Hookworm Infections/history , Malaria/history , Pellagra/history , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/epidemiology , Humans , Malaria/epidemiology , Pellagra/epidemiology , Southeastern United States/epidemiology
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