Epidemic cholera devastated Europe throughout the 19th century. The first cholera epidemic reached Malta in the summer of 1837 finding a poor and destitute population. Maltese doctors under the influence of the Italian school believed cholera to be contagious while British doctors alongside with the French and German medical institutions were convinced that the disease was non-contagious. When it hit the islands in June 1837, the Government and the doctors were unprepared. Recruiting medical personnel was difficult because there was fear of contagion and knowledge was lacking. Maltese doctors ran the cholera hospitals erected in different locations in Malta and Gozo and all the British doctors stationed in Malta with the army and navy altho...
The influenza virus type A has caused repeated pandemics throughout the 19th and 20 th century causi...
Belgium was struck by cholera seven times in the nineteenth century. The epidemic of 1866 was the wo...
From the pandemics of the 19th century to the recent disaster in Goma, Zaire, cholera has left an in...
The cholera epidemic which reached Malta in 1837 originated in Tessory in India in July 1817. The cr...
Bubonic plague reached Malta from Alexandria on 29 March 1813. The British garrison of about 3700 me...
An "eminent natural philosopher", Dr. Max Pettenkofer, came to Malta to study the manifestations of ...
The Church in Malta has played a pivotal role in the life of the Maltese for a millenium. When the c...
This paper was read on the 8th May at the Medical School, St. Luke's Hospital, at a meeting of the M...
Cholera is most often contracted by the consumption of food or water that has been infected with Vib...
[Excerpt] In the 19th century in result of the inherent advances of the industrializing process, the...
The plague epidemic in Malta began on the 24th December 1675. A description of how it started is pro...
The dark chronicle: In 1841, Dr Charles Galland, professor of anatomy at the Malta University carrie...
Before scientific understanding was fully realized, the common belief about the causes of sickness w...
The British Medical Association (Malta Branch) prize in the medical essay competition for 1969 was a...
The cholera, endemic in Bengal, in the early 19th century spread in the West thanks to the revolutio...
The influenza virus type A has caused repeated pandemics throughout the 19th and 20 th century causi...
Belgium was struck by cholera seven times in the nineteenth century. The epidemic of 1866 was the wo...
From the pandemics of the 19th century to the recent disaster in Goma, Zaire, cholera has left an in...
The cholera epidemic which reached Malta in 1837 originated in Tessory in India in July 1817. The cr...
Bubonic plague reached Malta from Alexandria on 29 March 1813. The British garrison of about 3700 me...
An "eminent natural philosopher", Dr. Max Pettenkofer, came to Malta to study the manifestations of ...
The Church in Malta has played a pivotal role in the life of the Maltese for a millenium. When the c...
This paper was read on the 8th May at the Medical School, St. Luke's Hospital, at a meeting of the M...
Cholera is most often contracted by the consumption of food or water that has been infected with Vib...
[Excerpt] In the 19th century in result of the inherent advances of the industrializing process, the...
The plague epidemic in Malta began on the 24th December 1675. A description of how it started is pro...
The dark chronicle: In 1841, Dr Charles Galland, professor of anatomy at the Malta University carrie...
Before scientific understanding was fully realized, the common belief about the causes of sickness w...
The British Medical Association (Malta Branch) prize in the medical essay competition for 1969 was a...
The cholera, endemic in Bengal, in the early 19th century spread in the West thanks to the revolutio...
The influenza virus type A has caused repeated pandemics throughout the 19th and 20 th century causi...
Belgium was struck by cholera seven times in the nineteenth century. The epidemic of 1866 was the wo...
From the pandemics of the 19th century to the recent disaster in Goma, Zaire, cholera has left an in...