The Rules of Contagion

(Greg DeLong) #1

  1. Ross claimed that the participants had been told what was
    involved, and that risks of the experiments were justified: ‘I think
    myself justified in making this experiment because of the vast
    importance a positive result would have and because I have a
    specific in quinine always at hand.’ (source: Ross, 1923).
    However, it is not clear how fully the risks were actually explained
    to participants; quinine is not as effective as the treatments used
    in modern studies of malaria (source: Achan J. et al., ‘Quinine, an
    old anti-malarial drug in a modern world: role in the treatment of
    malaria’ Malaria Journal, 2011.) We will look at the ethics of
    human experiments in more detail in Chapter 7.

  2. Bhattacharya S. et al., ‘Ronald Ross: Known scientist, unknown
    man’, Science and Culture, 2010.

  3. Chernin E., ‘Sir Ronald Ross vs. Sir Patrick Manson: A Matter
    of Libel’, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences,
    1988.

  4. Manson-Bahr P., History Of The School Of Tropical Medicine In
    London, 1899–1949, (London, 1956).

  5. Reiter P., ‘From Shakespeare to Defoe: Malaria in England in
    the Little Ice Age’, Emerging Infectious Diseases, 2000.

  6. High R., ‘The Panama Canal – the American Canal
    Construction’, International Construction, October 2008.

  7. Griffing S.M. et al., ‘A historical perspective on malaria control in
    Brazil’, Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, 2015.

  8. Jorland G. et al., Body Counts: Medical Quantification in
    Historical and Sociological Perspectives (McGill-Queen’s
    University Press, 2005).

  9. Fine P.E.M., ‘John Brownlee and the Measurement of
    Infectiousness: An Historical Study in Epidemic Theory’, Journal
    of the Royal Statistical Society, Series A, 1979.

  10. Fine P.E.M., ‘Ross’s a priori Pathometry – a Perspective’,
    Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, 1975.

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