‘Fight TB with BCG’: Mass Vaccination Campaigns in the British Caribbean, 1951–6

Author:

Altink Henrice

Abstract

AbstractBased 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.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

History,Medicine (miscellaneous),General Nursing

Reference155 articles.

1. The Gleaner, 10 May 1934.

2. Ibid., 4; WHO report St Kitts, 3.

3. See WHO reports and The Gleaner, 13 September 1955.

4. D. George Boyce, Decolonisation and the British Empire, 1775–1997(Basingstoke: MacMillan, 1999), 136–8.

5. 5. For more on class and racial biases in the provision of health care in the colonial Caribbean, see, Henrice Altink, 'Modernity, Race and Mental Health Care in Jamaica, c.1918-1944', Journal of the Department of Behavioural Sciences, 2, 1 (2012) at http://journals.sta.uwi.edu/jbs/index.asp?action=viewAbstract&articleId=312??(accessed at 10 June 2013)

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