Rockefeller Foundation. International Health Division
Found in 4 Collections and/or Records:
Mason V. Hargett Papers
Mason V. Hargett contributed significantly to the field of tropical medicine with his work on the yellow fever vaccine, first with the Rockefeller Foundation in Brazil and then at the USPHS Rocky Mountain Laboratory in Montana. Hargett's research facilitated the introduction of a yellow fever vaccine produced without human serum.
Richard M. Taylor Papers
Taylor was a microbiologist, public health official and Director of the Rockefeller Foundation International Health Division. His specialty was arboviruses. In 1951 at the age of 65 he helped establish a program at the U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit (NAMRU-3) in Egypt to study mosquito- and tick-borne viruses and their transmission cycles. Collaborating closely with Telford Work and others, their work helped eradicate yellow fever and identified the West Nile virus.
Telford H. Work Papers
The papers of Telford H. Work (1921-1995) highlight international research and teaching in the field of arbovirology and tropical disease. The collection, which spans from 1938-1990, contains material about his education, career, hobbies, and achievements.
Wilbur A. Sawyer Papers
Sawyer is best known for his role in developing a vaccine for yellow fever and working to eradicate the disease as a public health threat while working for the Rockefeller Foundation's West Africa Yellow Fever Commission.
Additional filters:
- Subject
- Tropical Medicine 3
- Arboviruses 2
- Brazil 2
- Egypt 2
- Encephalitis, Tick-Borne 2
- Florida 2
- Virology 2
- West Nile virus 2
- Yellow Fever 2
- Africa 1
- Argentina 1
- Australia 1
- Dengue 1
- Encephalitis Virus, Venezuelan Equine 1
- Encephalitis, Japanese B 1
- Encephalitis, Saint Louis 1
- Hemorrhagic Fevers, Viral 1
- India 1
- Indonesia 1
- Kyasanur Forest Disease 1
- Malaria Vaccines 1
- Malaria--epidemiology 1
- Mid-Atlantic Region 1
- Montana 1
- South America 1
- Sudan 1
- Texas 1
- Yellow Fever Vaccine 1
- Yellow Fever--epidemiology 1 + ∧ less