Front cover image for Malaria frontline : Australian Army research during World War II

Malaria frontline : Australian Army research during World War II

"In June 1943 the Australian Army formed a special research team, the Land Headquarters Medical Research Unit, under the guidance of Neil Hamilton Fairley, to tackle the problem of malarial infection. Experiments at Cairns on more than 800 volunteers (including the artist Donald Friend) and over 300 malaria-infected soldiers from New Guinea, constituted the largest series of clinical trials involving experimental transmission of human malaria ever conducted. Malaria was transmitted to the volunteers by mosquitoes previously fed on soldiers who had acquired the disease in New Guinea, and test drugs were then administered to assess their efficacy." "By early 1944 the results showed that the drug atebrin provided complete protection, provided it was taken scrupulously each day. The rigid atebrin discipline adopted by the Australian Army resulted in the lowest malaria levels ever recorded among troops operating for extended periods in highly malarious areas - and helped turn the tide of the war." "This meticulously documented book is the result of more than a decade of investigation by Dr. Tony Sweeney. He chronicles the Australian search to find a cure for malaria and the scientific breakthroughs. Malaria Frontline puts this story into the context of the continuing global fight against malaria."--BOOK JACKET

Print Book, English, 2003
Melbourne University Press, Carleton, Vic., 2003