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This book traces the growth in U.S. scientific and political
interest in the eradication of cholera and describes the medical
research and training facilities founded by the United States in
Asia between 1947 and 1980.
Cholera-the dehydration disease that can be fatal in just one or
two days-has been one of mankind's most tenacious and enigmatic
adversaries. Its well-documented history is the story of the
vagaries of a disease that originated in the Ganges delta, where it
causes annual epidemics, whose European incarnation is as old as
the Battle of Waterloo, and which was responsible for six pandemics
in the nineteenth century alone, three reaching the United States,
claiming 300,000 lives altogether. This book records the role of
U.S. medical science in the most recent-and finally
successful-campaign against cholera. Drs. van Heyningen and Seal
describe the first large-scale American research encounters with
cholera, in Cairo in 1947 and in Bangkok in 1959. The authors then
trace the growth in U.S. scientific and political interest in the
eradication of cholera and describe the medical research and
training facilities founded by the United States in Asia. There
were failures as well as successes-exhaustive field trials of
cholera vaccine proved ineffective-but eventually a simple oral
treatment was found, and, in the process, advances were made toward
the treatment of other dehydration diseases. The authors devote an
entire chapter to the biochemistry underlying the physiology of
cholera because its implications reach far beyond the disease
itself and throw light on many aspects of normal and abnormal
biochemistry. They also recall the debt of modern cholera research
to earlier discoveries, which were too often neglected. This
extraordinary history of one of the most important developments in
medicine concludes with an account of how, with the emergence of
the independent republic of Bangladesh, the U.S.-dominated cholera
research laboratory was, with good will, transformed into a locally
controlled international center for the study of diarrhoeal disease
and related problems.
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