Scholarly Note: American Medical Development in Colonial Puerto Rico

Thumbnail Image
Authors
Brock, Darryl E.
Issue Date
2011
Type
Article
Language
Keywords
Global development and peace , United States of America , Puerto Rico , Medical development
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Alternative Title
Abstract
Description
Consistent with its civilizing mission, the United States sought to enhance healthcare development in its new Puerto Rican colony, one of the spoils of the Spanish-American War. American military physicians rapidly cured the population of their devastating hookworm affliction and the Rockefeller Foundation soon began exporting this imperialist triumph to the far corners of the world. Leveraging that success, the Porto Rico Anemia Commission evolved into the Institute of Tropical Medicine, predecessor to the University of Puerto Rico's School of Tropical Medicine. Issues of agricultural development would also impact insular healthcare, uniquely driving aspects of medical development. Efforts to export American successes to broader Latin America provide useful perspectives as the United States seeks to influence other underdeveloped global areas in the twenty-first century.
Citation
Publisher
License
Journal
Volume
Issue
PubMed ID
DOI
ISSN
EISSN