1. Program to eradicate malaria in Sardinia, 1946-1950.
- Author
-
Tognotti E
- Subjects
- Animals, Anopheles drug effects, Anopheles growth & development, DDT administration & dosage, DDT pharmacology, History, 20th Century, Humans, Insect Vectors drug effects, Insecticides administration & dosage, Insecticides pharmacology, Italy epidemiology, Larva drug effects, Malaria epidemiology, Malaria prevention & control, National Health Programs, Politics, Foundations history, Malaria history, Mosquito Control history, Program Evaluation
- Abstract
During 1946-1950, the Rockefeller Foundation conducted a large-scale experiment in Sardinia to test the feasibility of indigenous vector species eradication. The interruption of malaria transmission did not require vector eradication, but with a goal of developing a new strategy to fight malaria, the choice was made to wage a rapid attack with a powerful new chemical. Costing millions of dollars, 267 metric tons of DDT were spread over the island. Although malaria was eliminated, the main objective, complete eradication of the vector, was not achieved. Despite its being considered almost eradicated in the mid-1940s, malaria 60 years later is still a major public health problem throughout the world, and its eradication is back on the global health agenda.
- Published
- 2009
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