December 2015
The article Hansen’s disease in the state of Amazonas: policy and institutional treatment of a disease discusses the historical aspects of the policies for controlling this disease from the second half of the nineteenth century until the dismantling of this model in 1978. The purpose of this study was to look at how these policies developed in the state of Amazonas.
The history and policies related to Hansen’s disease in the state of Amazonas are analyzed through the following institutions: Umirisal, the Oswaldo Cruz Dispensary, the Paricatuba Leprosarium, the Antônio Aleixo Colony, and the Gustavo Capanema Preventorium.
According to this article, the history of leprosy in Amazonas can be divided into three phases: 1889-1907, 1908-1921, and 1922-1929.
The first phase, characterized by expressive migration to the state of Amazonas due to the rubber boom, is marked by two problems: there were no separate facilities for these patients, and towns in the countryside sent their sick to the state capital . This period was , and this had a significant impact on the growth of the disease.
The second period (1908-1921), was marked by the relative isolation of patients in the institution called Umirisal, created in the nineteenth century for the isolation of smallpox sufferers.
The third phase (1922-1928) was characterized by the spread of the disease, with new facilities needed. The period was marked by the start of the work of the Public Health and Rural Prophylaxis Service in Amazonas.
Read the full article:
Schweickardt, Julio Cesar and Xerez, Luena Matheus de. Hansen’s disease in the state of Amazonas: policy and institutional treatment of a disease. Hist. cienc. saude-Manguinhos, Dez 2015, vol.22, no.4, p.1141-1156. ISSN 0104-5970
More about Hansen’s disease in HCS-Manguinhos:
Cueto, Marcos and Puente, José Carlos de la. Vida de leprosa:the testimony of a woman living with Hansen’s disease in the Peruvian Amazon, 1947. Hist. cienc. saude-Manguinhos, 2003, vol.10, suppl.1, p.337-360. ISSN 0104-5970
Joseph, D. George. “Essentially Christian, eminently philanthropic”: The Mission to Lepers in British India. Hist. cienc. saude-Manguinhos, 2003, vol.10, suppl.1, p.247-275. ISSN 0104-5970