Jacksonville Public Library

The Great fever, a Bosch and Company Inc. film for American Experience ; written and produced by Adriana Bosch

Label
The Great fever, a Bosch and Company Inc. film for American Experience ; written and produced by Adriana Bosch
Language
eng
Characteristic
videorecording
Intended audience
MPAA rating: Not rated
Main title
The Great fever
Medium
videorecording
Oclc number
76903167
Responsibility statement
a Bosch and Company Inc. film for American Experience ; written and produced by Adriana Bosch
Runtime
60
Summary
In June 1900, Major Walter Reed, Chief Surgeon of the U.S. Army, led a medical team to Cuba on a mission to investigate yellow fever. For more than two hundred years the disease had terrorized the United States, killing an estimated 100,000 people in the 19th century alone. Shortly after Reed and his team arrived in Havana they began testing the radical theories of a Cuban doctor, Carlos Finlay, who believed that mosquitoes spread yellow fever. This production documents the heroic efforts of Reed, s medical team to verify Finlay's theory. Eventually their discovery enabled the United States to successfully eradicate the disease among workers constructing the Panama Canal, making possible the completion of one of the most strategic waterways in the world. When yellow ever struck New Orleans in 1905, federal public health officials launched an aggressive mosquito eradication campaign and successfully ended the epidemic. It was the last yellow fever outbreak in the United States, and the first major public health triumph of the 20th century
Table Of Contents
Events: -- Epidemic in Philadelphia, 1793 -- 1878 epidemic -- Scourge of the Spanish American war -- Yellow fever and the scientific method -- Epidemic in New Orleans, 1905 -- Yellow fever in the 20th century and today
Target audience
general
Technique
live action
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