Altink Henrice
Department of History, University of York, YO10 5DD, York, UK.
Med Hist. 2014 Oct;58(4):475-97. doi: 10.1017/mdh.2014.49.
Based on a wide range of primary materials, including WHO reports and Colonial Office correspondence, this article examines the UNICEF/WHO-funded mass BCG campaigns that were carried out in seven Caribbean colonies between 1951 and 1956. It explores the reasons behind them, their nature and aftermath and also compares them to those in other non-European countries and discusses them within a context of decolonisation. In doing so, it not only adds to the scholarship on TB in non-European contexts, which had tended to focus on Africa and Asia, but also to the relatively new field of Caribbean medical history and the rapidly expanding body of work on international health, which has paid scant attention to the Anglophone Caribbean and the pre-independence period.
基于包括世界卫生组织报告和殖民办公室通信在内的大量原始资料,本文考察了1951年至1956年间在加勒比地区七个殖民地开展的由联合国儿童基金会/世界卫生组织资助的大规模卡介苗接种运动。文章探究了这些运动背后的原因、其性质和后果,并将它们与其他非欧洲国家的运动进行比较,同时在非殖民化的背景下对其进行讨论。这样做不仅丰富了以往倾向于关注非洲和亚洲的非欧洲背景下结核病研究的学术成果,也为相对较新的加勒比医学史领域以及迅速发展的国际卫生研究做出了贡献,而后者此前很少关注英语加勒比地区和独立前时期。