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Perspectives in Health Magazine |
A Century of Public Health
in the Americas
Since its founding in 1902, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) has been a central part of a century-long pursuit to bring health to all the peoples of the Americas. The world's oldest international health organization, PAHO has a history that is rich with the stories of dedicated individuals who faced major challenges and who, in many cases, achieved remarkable success. This "PAHO Family Album" salutes their valuable work and their accomplishments of 100 years of Pan American efforts in public health.
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Dr. Carlos Finlay (1833-1915), a distinguished Cuban physician and student of yellow fever, was one of four members of the 1902 organizing committee charged with setting up the new International Sanitary Bureau (the forerunner to PAHO). Dubbed "the mosquito man" by his critics, Dr. Finlay (on the right) had argued as early as 1881 that the mosquito was the sole vector for yellow fever, but he was unable to prove his theory. When in 1900 Maj. Walter Reed's Yellow Fever Board proved Finlay right, the stage was set for eradication efforts that routed the disease in the Caribbean and allowed completion of the Panama Canal.
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Delegates gather at the Fourth International Sanitary Conference, in San José, Costa Rica, in 1910. The conference's agenda covered inter-American cooperation in smallpox vaccination, malaria and tuberculosis control, national health legislation, and tropical disease research. The final document included this timely call:
"[We] request...of the Governments of the American Republics that they favor the establishment in seaports and important cities of laboratories where not only diagnoses may be made in order to comply with the requirements contained in the resolutions of our sanitary conventions, but where also original investigations in tropical medicine and general pathology can be made along lines which the sanitary authorities deem practicable."
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U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Rupert Blue (1868-1948) was the International Sanitary Bureau's second chairman, serving from 1911 to 1920. He had carried out crucial campaigns against bubonic plague in San Francisco (right) in 1902-04 and after the earthquake and fire of 1906. Yet his years at the Bureau were marked by a decline in inter-American health cooperation, an indirect result of the outbreak of World War I.
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A portrait of the signatories of the 1924 Pan American Sanitary Code, the first treaty to be signed by all the republics of the Americas. Dr. Carlos Graf, delegate of Chile (seated far left), wrote of the occasion:
"We delegates gather once again, yearning for progress and the possible perfection of our health institutions, taking new steps that will be firm and sure in the spirit that guides us, to maintain the health, well-being, and correct development of our peoples, to liberate them from the snares of the 100-headed hydra of vice and pain, and when possible, to extend those benefits to the rest of the world's peoples, for by natural law, the younger, with their strength, should help the eldest."
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![]() For Fred Soper at 80 |
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