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Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology

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Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology
TitleAnnals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology
DisciplineTropical medicine; Parasitology
LanguageEnglish
AbbreviationAnn. Trop. Med. Parasitol.
PublisherUnknown
CountryUnited Kingdom
History1907–2000s
FrequencyMonthly
Issn0003-4983

Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology The journal served as a long-running British periodical focusing on tropical medicine and parasitology with connections to institutions such as Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Royal Society and colonial-era bodies like the Colonial Office, British Empire and League of Nations. It functioned as a venue for research tied to fieldwork in regions including India, Nigeria, Kenya, Malaysia and Brazil, and it intersected with figures associated with Sir Ronald Ross, Patrick Manson, Alfred G. M. Hillhouse and organizations like the Wellcome Trust and World Health Organization.

History

Founded in the early 20th century amid debates involving Sir Patrick Manson and contemporaries linked to the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, the periodical emerged alongside journals such as The Lancet and BMJ during expansions of imperial science under the British Empire and the Colonial Office. Contributors included investigators connected to expeditions led by David Bruce, Cecil Warburton, Joseph Everett Dutton and public health administrators from India Office and Colonial Medical Service. Over decades the title documented transitions marked by events like the First World War, Second World War and postwar reorganizations involving the United Nations and World Health Organization, while reflecting methodological shifts influenced by researchers affiliated with London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Harvard School of Public Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Rockefeller Foundation.

Scope and Topics

The journal published research on parasite biology connected to taxa and diseases studied by scientists such as Ronald Ross (malarial investigations), Alphonse Laveran (protozoan parasites) and clinical case series from locales like Sierra Leone, Sudan, Ceylon, Malaya and Peru. Articles addressed vector ecology involving genera studied by Sir Ronald Ross and field teams relating to Anopheles, Aedes and Culex studies, and disease control programs linked to institutions including World Health Organization, Pan American Health Organization and the Rockefeller Foundation. Thematic coverage included helminthology associated with researchers like Harold Manter, bacterial parasitology examined by figures connected to Joseph Everett Dutton, clinical tropical medicine practiced in hospitals such as Queen Elizabeth Hospital, and public health campaigns influenced by policymakers from the Colonial Office and NGOs like Save the Children.

Editorial Structure and Publication Details

Editorial leadership historically included editors drawn from centers such as Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, and colonial medical services like the Colonial Medical Service and staff with links to Wellcome Trust archives, with peer reviewers from universities such as Oxford University, Cambridge University, University of Edinburgh, University of Glasgow and University of London. The periodical appeared on a monthly schedule similar to contemporaries like The Lancet and operated within publishing networks used by presses such as Wiley-Blackwell and Cambridge University Press; production and distribution involved mailings to libraries at institutions including Royal Society libraries, military hospitals associated with Royal Army Medical Corps and colonial administrations. Editorial standards evolved alongside professional bodies like the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene and conferences including the International Congress of Tropical Medicine and Malaria.

Abstracting and Indexing

The journal was indexed in bibliographic services and catalogs maintained by libraries such as the British Library, databases associated with the National Library of Medicine, archival listings at the Wellcome Library and citation compilations comparable to those used by Science Citation Index and Chemical Abstracts Service. Holdings were recorded in union catalogs like COPAC and cited in bibliographies compiled by historians at institutions including London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Wellcome Trust and researchers publishing in Bulletin of the World Health Organization and Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

Impact and Reception

Scholars and practitioners from institutions such as Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Harvard School of Public Health, Rockefeller Foundation and World Health Organization cited the journal in debates over control strategies for maladies like malaria, schistosomiasis and leishmaniasis, influencing programs in territories such as India, Nigeria, Kenya and Brazil. Reviews and citations appeared in periodicals including The Lancet, BMJ, Bulletin of the World Health Organization and Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, and historians at Wellcome Trust and University of Oxford have analyzed its role in shaping colonial public health, tropical medicine curricula at London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and research agendas at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.

Notable Articles and Contributions

Noteworthy contributions included field reports and experimental studies by researchers connected to Sir Ronald Ross, David Bruce, Joseph Everett Dutton, Patrick Manson and teams funded by Rockefeller Foundation and Wellcome Trust, documenting breakthroughs in vector control, clinical descriptions of parasitic syndromes encountered in West Africa, Southeast Asia, South America and methodological advances later referenced by agencies such as World Health Organization and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The journal's archives preserve case series, taxonomic descriptions, and program evaluations that informed subsequent monographs published by presses like Cambridge University Press, textbooks used at London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and guidelines promulgated by World Health Organization.

Category:Tropical medicine journals