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Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 19(5), 1970, pp. 891-894
Copyright © 1970 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

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História da Febre-Amarela no Brasil

by ODAIR FRANCO. 208 pages, paperbound, Ministério da Saude, Departamento Nacional de Endemias Rurais, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 1969. Also published in Revista Brasileira de Malariologia e Doenças Tropicais, 1969, vol. 21, pp. 315–320

J. Austin Kerr
3700 Manor Road Chevy Chase, Maryland 20015

This relatively short book, in Portuguese, summarizes the important facets of the history of yellow fever in Brazil from its first recorded appearance in Recife, Pernambuco, in 1685 to the reinfestation of Belém, Pará, by Aedes aegypti in 1967. The author, a Brazilian physician who began his lifelong career in yellow fever in 1935, believes that the jungle type of yellow fever in the American Tropics—a zoonosis—was the original form of the disease.

In the years 1685–92 some 2,000 deaths were alleged to have been caused by yellow fever in Recife, where the first yellow fever control effort in Brazil was made. The first autopsy of record of a case of yellow fever was done at sea in 1691 by Antonio Brebon aboard the Sacramento e Almas, a Portuguese naval transport. In 1694 the first book on yellow fever was published, in Lisbon by Ferreira da Rosa.







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Copyright © 1970 by the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.