Literature DB >> 26353437

The Invisible and Indeterminable Value of Ecology: From Malaria Control to Ecological Research in the American South.

Albert G Way.   

Abstract

This essay tells the story of the Emory University Field Station, a malaria research station in southwest Georgia that operated from 1939 to 1958. Using the tools of environmental history and the history of science, it examines the station's founding, its fieldwork, and its place within the broader history of malaria control, eradication, and research. A joint effort of Emory University, the U.S. Public Health Service, and the Communicable Disease Center (CDC), this station was closely aligned with a broader movement of ideas about tropical diseases across the globe, but it also offers a case study of how science in the field can veer from mainstream thinking and official policy. As the CDC and other disease-fighting organizations were moving toward a global strategy of malaria eradication through the use of DDT, the Emory Field Station developed a postsanitarian approach to malaria. Drawing on resistance among American conservationists to environmental transformation in the name of malaria control, the station's staff embraced the science and worldview of ecology in an effort to lighten public health's hand on the land and to link human health to the environment in innovative, if sometimes opaque, ways. This essay, then, argues that the Emory Field Station represents an early confluence of ecology with the biomedical sciences, something very similar to what is now the important discipline of disease ecology.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26353437     DOI: 10.1086/681978

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Isis        ISSN: 0021-1753            Impact factor:   0.688


  2 in total

1.  Ecology and Infection: Studying Host-Parasite Interactions at the Interface of Biology and Medicine.

Authors:  Pierre-Olivier Méthot; Rachel Mason Dentinger
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 1.326

2.  'Tipping the Balance': Karl Friedrich Meyer, Latent Infections, and the Birth of Modern Ideas of Disease Ecology.

Authors:  Mark Honigsbaum
Journal:  J Hist Biol       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 1.326

  2 in total

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