American Decades
"The Conduct of a Plague Campaign"
Journal article
By: Rupert Blue
Date: February 1, 1908
Source: Blue, Rupert. "The Conduct of a Plague Campaign." Journal of the American Medical Association, February 1, 1908, 327–329.
About the Author: Rupert Blue (1868–1948) was born in Richmond County, North Carolina, and received his doctorate in medicine from the University of Maryland in 1892. The following year, he joined the Marine Hospital Service as an assistant surgeon. He worked with health officials throughout the United States in combating plague and yellow fever. Between 1912 and 1920, he was the U.S. surgeon general.
Introduction
The bacterium Yersinia pestis causes plague. The bacterium lives in the gut of the flea Xenopsylla cheopis, which transmits the bacterium to mammals by biting them, much as female mosquitoes transmit malaria, yellow fever, and the West Nile Virus...
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1900's Medicine and Health Primary Sources
- Letter to Jefferson Randolph Kean
- 1900 Rambler and 1900 Pierce-Arrow
- "How to Prevent Consumption (Tuberculosis) and Other Germ Diseases"
- "Preliminary Report of the Committee on Organization"
- The Jungle
- FDA-Federal Meat Inspection Act
- Pure Food and Drug Act
- "An Epidemic of Acute Pellagra"
- Letter to Commissioner of Indian Affairs Francis E. Leupp
- "The Conduct of a Plague Campaign"
- "Soil Pollution: The Chain Gang As a Possible Disseminator of Intestinal Parasites and Infections"
- "Early History, in Part Esoteric, of the Hookworm (Uncinariasis) Campaign in Our Southern United States"
- Abraham Flexner: An Autobiography
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
