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1

1955-, Humphreys Margaret, ed. Yellow fever and the South. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1992.

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2

World Health Organization. Expanded Programme on Immunization. The resurgence of deadly yellow fever: Prevention using EPI : highlights. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1992.

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3

Coelho, Benedito Carlos Marcondes. O pacote da saúde no Governo de Rodrigues Alves, 1902-1906. [São Paulo?: s.n., 1988.

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4

Fiebre dorada o fiebre amarilla?: La Fundación Rockefeller en México (1911-1924). Guadalajara, México: Universidad de Guadalajara, 1997.

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5

In the interest of truth: The life and science of Surgeon General George Miller Sternberg. Fort Sam Houston, TX: Office of The Surgeon General, Borden Institute, U.S. Army Medical Department Center and School, 2013.

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6

Parker, James N., and Philip M. Parker. Yellow fever: A medical dictionary, bibliography, and annotated research guide to Internet references. San Diego, CA: ICON Health Publications, 2004.

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7

Monath, Thomas P., and J. Erin Staples. Yellow fever. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198570028.003.0045.

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Yellow fever is an acute mosquito-borne flavivirus infection characterized in its full-blown form by fever, jaundice, albuminuria, and haemorrhage. Two forms are distinguished: urban yellow fever in which the virus is spread from person to person by peridomestic Aedes aegypti mosquitoes and jungle (sylvan) yellow fever transmitted by tree-hole breeding mosquitoes between non-human primates and sometimes humans. Yellow fever is endemic and epidemic in tropical areas of the Americas and Africa but has never appeared in Asia or the Pacific region. Prevention and control are effected principally through yellow fever vaccination.
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8

Organization, World Health, ed. Prevention and control of yellow fever in Africa. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1986.

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9

(WHO), World Health Organization. Control of Yellow Fever: Field Guide (PAHO Scientific Publications). Not Avail, 2005.

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10

Yellow Fever and the South. The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999.

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11

Febre amarela: A doença e a vacina, uma história inacabada. Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Instituto de Tecnologia em Imunobiológicos, 2001.

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12

Febre amarela: A doenca e a vacina, uma historia inacabada. Editora Fiocruz, 2001.

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13

World Health Organization (WHO). International Certificate of Vaccination - International Health Regulation. World Health Organization, 2007.

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14

Benchimol, Jaime. Yellow fever vaccine in Brazil: fighting a tropical scourge, modernising the nation. Manchester University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526110886.003.0008.

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This chapter shows how successive yellow fever vaccines, conceived as complex sociotechnical constructs, have been involved in the construction of the Brazilian nation state. Three distinct periods in the country’s political history are distinguished: the patriarchal oligarchic state (1822-1930), the national developmentalist state (1930-80), and the state which has since then oscillated between liberal dependency and national interventionism. The successful campaigns against yellow fever run by Oswaldo Cruz formed the backbone for the founding myth of scientific public health and medicine in Brazil. The trajectory of the yellow fever vaccine manufactured at the Oswaldo Cruz Institute, which eventually became the biggest producer worldwide, coincides with economic, welfare, and labour policies that principally benefited urban groups. Rural populations would be the main recipients of the yellow fever vaccine, and it became an important component when national agencies tackled endemic diseases in the interior. Immunisation programmes have helped strengthen the country’s health system, disseminating a culture of prevention. The social mobilisation achieved by the yellow fever and other vaccination campaigns led to new relationships between communities and health services.
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15

Fundação Nacional de Saúde (Brazil), ed. Manual de vigilância epidemiológica de febre amarela. Brasília: Ministério da Saúde, Fundação Nacional de Saúde, 1999.

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16

Integrated Management Strategy for Arboviral Disease Prevention and Control in the Americas. Organización Panamericana de la Salud, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.37774/9789275120491.

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In recent years, conditions in the Region of the Americas have been highly favorable for the introduction and spread of arthropod-borne viral infections (arboviral diseases). Although dengue has been circulating for over 400 years, the number of cases reported since the year 2000 represents an unprecedented increase, with four serotypes in circulation. Since that year, 19.6 million cases of dengue have been reported to PAHO/WHO, including more than 800,000 severe cases and over 10,000 deaths. In 2015 and 2016 alone, more than 4.8 million cases were reported, 17,000 of them severe, resulting in 2,000 deaths. Despite a 23% reduction in the dengue case-fatality rate in the last six years (from 0.069% to 0.053%), the continued risk of severe disease and even death poses a serious public health problem in the Americas. Today, arboviruses present an extremely complex and unstable epidemiological situation, given the simultaneous epidemic circulation of three arboviral diseases and the risk that others could become epidemics, for example, Mayaro fever. Countries are aware that this complex situation can only be addressed with a comprehensive and multidisciplinary approach. The development of IMS-arbovirus is part of a history of technical cooperation between PAHO/WHO and the countries and territories of the Americas. It is based on the lessons learned during the development and implementation of national IMS-dengue programs in recent years. This history of cooperation is not new. It dates back to October 1947, with the adoption of Resolution CD1.R1 during the first Directing Council of PAHO. This resolution stated that the solution to the problem of urban yellow fever would be the eradication of Ae. aegypti in the entire hemisphere. The success of that campaign was demonstrated in 1962, with the eradication of this vector in 18 countries in the Region and several Caribbean islands.
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17

), Mucor (pseud. Theory of the Causation and Suggestions for the Prevention of Dysentery: Together with Hypotheses on the Causation and Views As to the Prevention of Typhoid, Cholera, Yellow Fever, Remittent, Diphtheria, Typhus, and Other Zymotic Diseases in Man and Ani. HardPress, 2020.

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18

Oldstone, Michael B. A. Viruses, Plagues, and History. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190056780.001.0001.

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“Viruses, Plagues, & History” focuses on the effects of viral diseases on human history. Written by an eminent internationally respected virologist, it couples the fabric of history with major concepts developed in virology, immunology, vaccination, and accounts by people who first had, saw and acted at the times these events occurred. Much of the preventive and therapeutic progress (vaccines, antiviral drugs) has been made in the last 60 years. Many of those who played commanding roles in the fight to understand, control and eradicate viruses and viral diseases are (were) personally known to the author and several episodes described in this book reflect their input. The book records the amazing accomplishments that led to the control of lethal and disabling viral diseases caused by Smallpox, Yellow Fever, Measles, Polio, Hepatitis A, B and C, and HIV. These six success stories are contrasted with viral infections currently out of control—COVID-19, Ebola virus, Lassa Fever virus, Hantavirus, West Nile virus, and Zika. Influenza, under reasonable containment at present, but with the potential to revert to a world-wide pandemic similar to 1918–1919 where over 50 million people were killed. The new platforms to develop inhibitory and prophylactic vaccines to limit these and other viral diseases is contrasted to the anti-vaccine movement and the false prophets of autism.
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19

Medical inquiries and observations: In four volumes. 2nd ed. Philadelphia: J. Conrad, 1985.

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