|
|
Joint Health Command |
|
|
Army Malaria InstituteHistory
At the beginning of the Pacific campaign of WWII there was a critical shortage of quinine in Australia. 90% of the worlds supply was produced in Indonesia which lay directly in the path of the advancing Japanese forces. The Australian Army under the guidance of Colonel N.H. Fairley established a malaria experimental group in Cairns in 1943 where malaria was still present at the time. With the assistance of Australian Malaria Control Units and Mobile Entomological Sections the experimental group were able to advance their studies with sulphamerazine and atebrin. The final experiments in by the Cairns experimental group were conducted in Mar 1946. The 1 Malaria Research Laboratory was established in 1967 by the
efforts of R.H. Black, professor of Tropical Medicine at the School
of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Sydney University. Black
was also consultant in tropical medicine to the ADF and following
the malaria problems experienced by ADF troops in Vietnam recommended
to the ADF Medical Services that they should conduct research into
malaria to minimise future problems with this disease. The 1 Malarial
Research Laboratory was originally located within the School of
Public Health and Tropical Medicine but moved to the Ingleburn Army
Camp in 1973 and the name changed to the Army Malaria Research Unit.
In 1996 the unit moved to a modern laboratory complex at Gallipoli
Barracks, Brisbane and renamed the Australian Army Malaria Institute.
23 April, 2010 |
|
|
|