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Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
01/01/1962 00:00:00
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Reference ID
U27ZGU
Headline
Trachoma in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region
Description
The causal agent of trachoma is commonly called a "virus", but in fact it belongs to a group of micro-organisms which have characters distinguishing them from both viruses and bacteria. Fortunately, unlike true viruses, they are susceptible to sulfonamides and antibiotics and mass treatment programmes. Some 30 laboratories in five continents were working on this mysterious "virus". Experimental vaccines were under trial and encouraging results had been reported in studies on simians, human volunteers and population groups at risk. Further laboratory and field research was needed, however, before the feasibility of mass immunization against trachoma could be judged. The Virological Research Laboratory of the Institute of Ophthalmology, Tunis, is one of many laboratories which were receiving encouragement and support from the World Health Organization as part of a global programme of medical research into diseases affecting developing countries. Part of the work included field research on the Island of Djerba and in South East Tunisia - some 500 kms from Tunis. Scraping from the conjunctiva and samples of blood were taken from 2.000 school children in the area during an annual clinical case-finding examination. The conjunctival scrapings were rushed by car and plane to Tunis for isolation and cultivation of the virus strains in embryonated eggs. These studies were carried out to determine the degree of correlation between laboratory findings and clinical diagnosis and to test the sensitivity of local strains of virus to different antibiotics. The blood samples were being used for immunological studies.
Dr Labonne, ophthalmologist on the island of Djerba, operates on a case of glaucoma at the Ophthalmological Dispensary.
Asset date
01/01/1962
Country, area, WHO office
Tunisia
Location
Djerba Island
WHO Region
EMRO
Copyright
© WHO / Eric Schwab
Consent
No
File size
1.59 MB
Visibility class:
Public
Administered By
HQ Records and Archives
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