Literature DB >> 23524904

The history of the Greek Anti-Malaria League and the influence of the Italian School of Malariology.

Costas Tsiamis1, Evangelia Theophano Piperaki, Athanassios Tsakris.   

Abstract

In 1905, a group of eminent Greek physicians led by Professor of Hygiene and Microbiology Constantinos Savvas and the pediatrician Dr. Ioannis Kardamatis founded the Greek Anti-Malaria League. The League assumed a role that the State would not, and for the next 25 years organized the country's anti-malaria campaign. During its first steps, the Greek Anti-Malaria League adopted the principles of Professor Angelo Celli's Italian Anti-Malaria League. The League's accomplishments include a decrease in malarial prevalence, due to mass treatment with quinine, new legislation ensuring the provision of quinine, State monopoly and the collection of epidemiologic data. However, defeat in the Greek-Turkish War (1922) and the massive influx of one million Greek refugees that ensued, led to a change in malarial epidemiology. In 1928, following a visit to Italy, the Greek League adopted the organization and knowledge of the Italian Malaria Schools in Rome and in Nettuno, and this experience served as the basis of their proposal to the State for the development of the anti-malaria services infrastructure. The State adopted many of Professor Savvas' proposals and modified his plan according to Greek needs. The League's experience, accumulated during its 25 years of struggle against malaria, was its legacy to the campaigns that eventually accomplished the eradication of malaria from Greece after World War II.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23524904

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infez Med        ISSN: 1124-9390


  2 in total

1.  Historical and Epidemiological study of malaria cases of the "Refugee Hospital" in Veria in the context of Anti-Malaria Battle in Greece (1926-1940).

Authors:  Spyros N Michaleas; Theodoros N Sergentanis; Neni Panourgia; Artemis K Tsitsika; Theodora Psaltopoulou; Athanase D Protogerou; Marianna Karamanou
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2020-09-22

Review 2.  Malaria's contribution to World War One - the unexpected adversary.

Authors:  Bernard J Brabin
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2014-12-16       Impact factor: 2.979

  2 in total

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