Difference between revisions of "Timeline of yellow fever"

From Timelines
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "{{Attribute English Wikipedia|original-exists=yes}} {{for|a comprehensive treatment of the subject|History of yellow fever}} This is a timeline of yellow fever. Major eve...")
 
Line 2: Line 2:
  
 
{{for|a comprehensive treatment of the subject|History of yellow fever}}
 
{{for|a comprehensive treatment of the subject|History of yellow fever}}
This is a timeline of [[yellow fever]]. Major events such as historical epidemics and medical developments are described.
+
This is a timeline of [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]]. Major events such as historical epidemics and medical developments are described.
  
 
==Big Picture==
 
==Big Picture==
Line 8: Line 8:
 
! Year/period !! Key developments
 
! Year/period !! Key developments
 
|-
 
|-
| 17th century || Yellow fever infection spreads as the shipping industry and global commerce expand. Large numbers of African slaves, infected with yellow fever, also spread the disease.<ref name="Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease" /> Early recorded epidemics of yellow fever occur in [[Barbados]], [[Cuba]], [[Guadeloupe]] and [[Mexico]].<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" />
+
| 17th century || Yellow fever infection spreads as the shipping industry and global commerce expand. Large numbers of African slaves, infected with yellow fever, also spread the disease.<ref name="Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease" /> Early recorded epidemics of yellow fever occur in [[wikipedia:Barbados|Barbados]], [[wikipedia:Cuba|Cuba]], [[wikipedia:Guadeloupe|Guadeloupe]] and [[wikipedia:Mexico|Mexico]].<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" />
 
|-
 
|-
 
| 18th century || Yellow fever spreads to Europe.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever">{{cite web|title=Timeline of yellow fever|url=https://www.cdc.gov/travel-training/local/HistoryEpidemiologyandVaccination/images/timeline_v13.swf|website=cdc.gov|accessdate=7 February 2017}}</ref> Outbreaks are also reported from areas within West Africa, with far fewer outbreaks being identified in East Africa.<ref name="Yellow Fever Outbreak, Southern Sudan, 2003">{{cite journal|title=Yellow Fever Outbreak, Southern Sudan, 2003|doi=10.3201/eid1009.030727|pmc=3320285}}</ref>
 
| 18th century || Yellow fever spreads to Europe.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever">{{cite web|title=Timeline of yellow fever|url=https://www.cdc.gov/travel-training/local/HistoryEpidemiologyandVaccination/images/timeline_v13.swf|website=cdc.gov|accessdate=7 February 2017}}</ref> Outbreaks are also reported from areas within West Africa, with far fewer outbreaks being identified in East Africa.<ref name="Yellow Fever Outbreak, Southern Sudan, 2003">{{cite journal|title=Yellow Fever Outbreak, Southern Sudan, 2003|doi=10.3201/eid1009.030727|pmc=3320285}}</ref>
 
|-
 
|-
| 19th century || Public health experts continue to believe yellow fever is transmitted by contact with infected patients.<ref name="Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease" /> At the close of the century, yellow fever is a known and feared pestilence of the [[western hemisphere]] and the coastal regions of [[West Africa]], for which no cause or effective treatment is known.<ref name="The Yellow Fever Vaccine: A History" /> [[Josiah C. Nott]] and [[Carlos Finlay]] link yellow fever to [[mosquito]]es as disease vectors.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" />
+
| 19th century || Public health experts continue to believe yellow fever is transmitted by contact with infected patients.<ref name="Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease" /> At the close of the century, yellow fever is a known and feared pestilence of the [[wikipedia:western hemisphere|western hemisphere]] and the coastal regions of [[wikipedia:West Africa|West Africa]], for which no cause or effective treatment is known.<ref name="The Yellow Fever Vaccine: A History" /> [[wikipedia:Josiah C. Nott|Josiah C. Nott]] and [[wikipedia:Carlos Finlay|Carlos Finlay]] link yellow fever to [[wikipedia:mosquito|mosquito]]es as disease vectors.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" />
 
|-
 
|-
| 1900s || Early in the century, ''[[aedes aegypti]]'' is established as the yellow fever disease vector, and eradication of it in a number of countries, notably [[Panama]], [[Brazil]], [[Ecuador]], [[Peru]], [[Bolivia]], [[Paraguay]], [[Uruguay]], and [[Argentina]], leads to the disappearance of urban yellow fever.<ref name="Yellow Fever Vaccine Recommendations of the Immunization Practices Advisory Committee (ACIP)" /> Yellow fever is eradicated from the [[United States]].<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" />  
+
| 1900s || Early in the century, ''[[wikipedia:aedes aegypti|aedes aegypti]]'' is established as the yellow fever disease vector, and eradication of it in a number of countries, notably [[wikipedia:Panama|Panama]], [[wikipedia:Brazil|Brazil]], [[wikipedia:Ecuador|Ecuador]], [[wikipedia:Peru|Peru]], [[wikipedia:Bolivia|Bolivia]], [[wikipedia:Paraguay|Paraguay]], [[wikipedia:Uruguay|Uruguay]], and [[wikipedia:Argentina|Argentina]], leads to the disappearance of urban yellow fever.<ref name="Yellow Fever Vaccine Recommendations of the Immunization Practices Advisory Committee (ACIP)" /> Yellow fever is eradicated from the [[wikipedia:United States|United States]].<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" />  
 
|-
 
|-
 
| 1930s || Yellow fever vaccines are developed.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> Massive vaccination campaigns would follow.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" />
 
| 1930s || Yellow fever vaccines are developed.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> Massive vaccination campaigns would follow.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" />
 
|-
 
|-
| 1940s–1950s || Mass campaigns are conducted using the [[17D vaccine]] in [[South America]] and the [[French neurotropic vaccine]] in French-controlled areas of [[Africa]]. Large scale vaccination campaigns would reduce yellow fever incidence for several decades.<ref name="Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data">{{cite journal|last1=|editor1-last=Hay|editor1-first=Simon I.|title=Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data|doi=10.1371/journal.pmed.1001638|pmc=4011853}}</ref><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /><ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /> In the 1940s and early 1950s, nearly 40 million doses of FNV would be administered in French-speaking countries of [[West Africa]].<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" />
+
| 1940s–1950s || Mass campaigns are conducted using the [[wikipedia:17D vaccine|17D vaccine]] in [[wikipedia:South America|South America]] and the [[wikipedia:French neurotropic vaccine|French neurotropic vaccine]] in French-controlled areas of [[wikipedia:Africa|Africa]]. Large scale vaccination campaigns would reduce yellow fever incidence for several decades.<ref name="Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data">{{cite journal|last1=|editor1-last=Hay|editor1-first=Simon I.|title=Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data|doi=10.1371/journal.pmed.1001638|pmc=4011853}}</ref><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /><ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /> In the 1940s and early 1950s, nearly 40 million doses of FNV would be administered in French-speaking countries of [[wikipedia:West Africa|West Africa]].<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" />
 
|-
 
|-
| 1960s || Yellow fever outbreaks occur in both [[Africa]] and the [[Americas]]. Thousands of cases are reported in [[West Africa]], where vaccination coverage is weak or absent.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /><ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" />  
+
| 1960s || Yellow fever outbreaks occur in both [[wikipedia:Africa|Africa]] and the [[wikipedia:Americas|Americas]]. Thousands of cases are reported in [[wikipedia:West Africa|West Africa]], where vaccination coverage is weak or absent.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /><ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" />  
 
|-
 
|-
| 1980s onwards || Incidence of yellow fever increases in [[Africa]]. Between 1980 and 2012, 150 yellow fever outbreaks in 26 countries in Africa would be reported to the [[World Health Organization]].<ref name="Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data" /><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" />  Early in the 1990s, global estimates of 200,000 cases and 30,000 deaths annually are reported, around 90% of which occur in [[Africa]].<ref name="Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data" />
+
| 1980s onwards || Incidence of yellow fever increases in [[wikipedia:Africa|Africa]]. Between 1980 and 2012, 150 yellow fever outbreaks in 26 countries in Africa would be reported to the [[wikipedia:World Health Organization|World Health Organization]].<ref name="Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data" /><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" />  Early in the 1990s, global estimates of 200,000 cases and 30,000 deaths annually are reported, around 90% of which occur in [[wikipedia:Africa|Africa]].<ref name="Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data" />
 
|-
 
|-
 
| 2000s || Yellow fever vaccine is incorporated into the routine childhood vaccinations of several South American and African countries, thus decreasing the number of persons susceptible to the disease over time.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" />  
 
| 2000s || Yellow fever vaccine is incorporated into the routine childhood vaccinations of several South American and African countries, thus decreasing the number of persons susceptible to the disease over time.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" />  
 
|-
 
|-
| Recent years || Between 2007 and 2016, 14 countries would complete preventive yellow fever vaccination campaigns.<ref name="Yellow fever fact sheets">{{cite web|title=Yellow fever fact sheets|url=http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs100/en/|publisher=[[WHO]]|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref> Today, Yellow fever causes 200,000 infections and 30,000 deaths every year, with nearly 90% of these occurring in [[Africa]].{{citation needed|date=February 2017}} Forty-four countries in Africa, South and Central America are within the modern yellow fever endemic zone, with almost 900 million people at risk of infection.<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" />
+
| Recent years || Between 2007 and 2016, 14 countries would complete preventive yellow fever vaccination campaigns.<ref name="Yellow fever fact sheets">{{cite web|title=Yellow fever fact sheets|url=http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs100/en/|publisher=[[wikipedia:WHO|WHO]]|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref> Today, Yellow fever causes 200,000 infections and 30,000 deaths every year, with nearly 90% of these occurring in [[wikipedia:Africa|Africa]].{{citation needed|date=February 2017}} Forty-four countries in Africa, South and Central America are within the modern yellow fever endemic zone, with almost 900 million people at risk of infection.<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" />
 
|-
 
|-
 
|}
 
|}
Line 32: Line 32:
 
==Full timeline==
 
==Full timeline==
  
[[File:WHO-UNICEF estimates of YFV coverage in African countries.png|thumb|center|500px|WHO-UNICEF estimates of yellow fever vaccine coverage in% in African countries, for the period 1997-2015.<ref name="WHO-UNICEF estimates of YFV coverage">{{cite web|title=WHO-UNICEF estimates of YFV coverage|url=http://apps.who.int/immunization_monitoring/globalsummary/timeseries/tswucoverageyfv.html|publisher=[[WHO]]|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref>]]
+
[[wikipedia:File:WHO-UNICEF estimates of YFV coverage in African countries.png|thumb|center|500px|WHO-UNICEF estimates of yellow fever vaccine coverage in% in African countries, for the period 1997-2015.<ref name="WHO-UNICEF estimates of YFV coverage">{{cite web|title=WHO-UNICEF estimates of YFV coverage|url=http://apps.who.int/immunization_monitoring/globalsummary/timeseries/tswucoverageyfv.html|publisher=[[wikipedia:WHO|WHO]]|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref>]]
[[File:WHO-UNICEF estimates of YFV coverage.png|thumb|center|500px|WHO-UNICEF estimates of yellow fever vaccine coverage in% in American countries, for the period 1997-2015.<ref name="WHO-UNICEF estimates of YFV coverage" />]]
+
[[wikipedia:File:WHO-UNICEF estimates of YFV coverage.png|thumb|center|500px|WHO-UNICEF estimates of yellow fever vaccine coverage in% in American countries, for the period 1997-2015.<ref name="WHO-UNICEF estimates of YFV coverage" />]]
 
{| class="sortable wikitable"
 
{| class="sortable wikitable"
 
! Year/period !! Type of event !! Event !! Geographical location  
 
! Year/period !! Type of event !! Event !! Geographical location  
 
|-
 
|-
| 3000 BP || || Probable origin of yellow fever in Africa, according to modern sequence analysis of the viral genome.<ref name="Immunisation against infectious diseases" /> || [[Africa]]
+
| 3000 BP || || Probable origin of yellow fever in Africa, according to modern sequence analysis of the viral genome.<ref name="Immunisation against infectious diseases" /> || [[wikipedia:Africa|Africa]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1494 || Epidemic || Disease outbreaks similar in signs and symptoms to yellow fever are reported from [[Canary islands]] and [[Cape Verde]] off the coast of Africa, and sometimes in coastal countries such as [[Gambia]], and [[Sierra Leone]].<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[West Africa]]
+
| 1494 || Epidemic || Disease outbreaks similar in signs and symptoms to yellow fever are reported from [[wikipedia:Canary islands|Canary islands]] and [[wikipedia:Cape Verde|Cape Verde]] off the coast of Africa, and sometimes in coastal countries such as [[wikipedia:Gambia|Gambia]], and [[wikipedia:Sierra Leone|Sierra Leone]].<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[wikipedia:West Africa|West Africa]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1647 || Epidemic || The first definitive outbreak of yellow fever in the [[Americas]] happens in the island of Barbados.{{citation needed|date=February 2017}} || [[Barbados]]
+
| 1647 || Epidemic || The first definitive outbreak of yellow fever in the [[wikipedia:Americas|Americas]] happens in the island of Barbados.{{citation needed|date=February 2017}} || [[wikipedia:Barbados|Barbados]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1648 || Epidemic || An outbreak is recorded by Spanish colonists in the Yucatán Peninsula, where the indigenous [[Mayan people]] call the illness ''xekik'' ("blood vomit"). Yellow fever is found in Mayan manuscripts describing an outbreak of the disease in the [[Yucatan peninsula]].<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat">{{cite journal|last1=Gardner|first1=Christina L.|last2=Ryman|first2=Kate D.|title=Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat|doi=10.1016/j.cll.2010.01.001|pmc=4349381}}</ref><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[Mexico]]
+
| 1648 || Epidemic || An outbreak is recorded by Spanish colonists in the Yucatán Peninsula, where the indigenous [[wikipedia:Mayan people|Mayan people]] call the illness ''xekik'' ("blood vomit"). Yellow fever is found in Mayan manuscripts describing an outbreak of the disease in the [[wikipedia:Yucatan peninsula|Yucatan peninsula]].<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat">{{cite journal|last1=Gardner|first1=Christina L.|last2=Ryman|first2=Kate D.|title=Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat|doi=10.1016/j.cll.2010.01.001|pmc=4349381}}</ref><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[wikipedia:Mexico|Mexico]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1649 || Epidemic || Yellow fever is brought in ships to and from [[Africa]] and the [[West Indies]], to [[Gibraltar]].<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[Gibraltar]]
+
| 1649 || Epidemic || Yellow fever is brought in ships to and from [[wikipedia:Africa|Africa]] and the [[wikipedia:West Indies|West Indies]], to [[wikipedia:Gibraltar|Gibraltar]].<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[wikipedia:Gibraltar|Gibraltar]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1668 || Epidemic ||  The first yellow fever outbreak in English-speaking [[North America]] occurs in [[New York City]].<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[United States]]
+
| 1668 || Epidemic ||  The first yellow fever outbreak in English-speaking [[wikipedia:North America|North America]] occurs in [[wikipedia:New York City|New York City]].<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[wikipedia:United States|United States]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1669 || Epidemic || English colonists in [[Philadelphia]] and the French in the Mississippi River Valley record major outbreaks of yellow fever.{{citation needed|date=February 2017}} || [[United States]]
+
| 1669 || Epidemic || English colonists in [[wikipedia:Philadelphia|Philadelphia]] and the French in the Mississippi River Valley record major outbreaks of yellow fever.{{citation needed|date=February 2017}} || [[wikipedia:United States|United States]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1685 || Epidemic || Brazil suffers its first yellow fever epidemic, in [[Recife]].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Bethell|first1=Leslie|title=Colonial Brazil|url=https://books.google.com.ar/books?id=gzBHJt4FtC8C&pg=PA97&lpg=PA97&dq=1685+Epidemic+Brazil+suffered+its+first+epidemic,+in+Recife.&source=bl&ots=TG8d4r-LSr&sig=-t6JEUnuWIaYeyXGZ1YDxnK_O9I&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiF4faR_PzRAhUIQ5AKHQpWDSQQ6AEIQTAG#v=onepage&q=1685%20Epidemic%20Brazil%20suffered%20its%20first%20epidemic%2C%20in%20Recife.&f=false|accessdate=7 February 2017}}</ref> || [[Brazil]]
+
| 1685 || Epidemic || Brazil suffers its first yellow fever epidemic, in [[wikipedia:Recife|Recife]].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Bethell|first1=Leslie|title=Colonial Brazil|url=https://books.google.com.ar/books?id=gzBHJt4FtC8C&pg=PA97&lpg=PA97&dq=1685+Epidemic+Brazil+suffered+its+first+epidemic,+in+Recife.&source=bl&ots=TG8d4r-LSr&sig=-t6JEUnuWIaYeyXGZ1YDxnK_O9I&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiF4faR_PzRAhUIQ5AKHQpWDSQQ6AEIQTAG#v=onepage&q=1685%20Epidemic%20Brazil%20suffered%20its%20first%20epidemic%2C%20in%20Recife.&f=false|accessdate=7 February 2017}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:Brazil|Brazil]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1730 || Epidemic || 2,200 deaths are reported in [[Cadiz]], Spain, due to yellow fever, followed by outbreaks in French and British seaports.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> ||
+
| 1730 || Epidemic || 2,200 deaths are reported in [[wikipedia:Cadiz|Cadiz]], Spain, due to yellow fever, followed by outbreaks in French and British seaports.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> ||
 
|-
 
|-
| 1750 || Epidemic  || The term ''yellow fever'' is first used by author Griffin Hughes in his book ''Natural History of Barbadoes''.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /><ref name="Immunisation against infectious diseases">{{cite book|title=Immunisation against infectious diseases|publisher=Great Britain: Department of Health|url=https://books.google.com.ar/books?id=N0RY-qAyiFIC&pg=PA444&lpg=PA444&dq=%22yellow+fever+was+first+used+in%22&source=bl&ots=IXAQvohX8X&sig=DgNG4Ca4cgY34tiqb7D7oyMUFzk&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiltJL66fzRAhVFGJAKHQHbBksQ6AEIGDAA#v=onepage&q=%22yellow%20fever%20was%20first%20used%20in%22&f=false|accessdate=7 February 2017}}</ref> || [[Barbados]]
+
| 1750 || Epidemic  || The term ''yellow fever'' is first used by author Griffin Hughes in his book ''Natural History of Barbadoes''.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /><ref name="Immunisation against infectious diseases">{{cite book|title=Immunisation against infectious diseases|publisher=Great Britain: Department of Health|url=https://books.google.com.ar/books?id=N0RY-qAyiFIC&pg=PA444&lpg=PA444&dq=%22yellow+fever+was+first+used+in%22&source=bl&ots=IXAQvohX8X&sig=DgNG4Ca4cgY34tiqb7D7oyMUFzk&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiltJL66fzRAhVFGJAKHQHbBksQ6AEIGDAA#v=onepage&q=%22yellow%20fever%20was%20first%20used%20in%22&f=false|accessdate=7 February 2017}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:Barbados|Barbados]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1778 || Epidemic || Yellow fever outbreak reportedly decimates English troops stationed at [[Saint-Louis, Senegal]].<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[Senegal]]  
+
| 1778 || Epidemic || Yellow fever outbreak reportedly decimates English troops stationed at [[wikipedia:Saint-Louis, Senegal|Saint-Louis, Senegal]].<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[wikipedia:Senegal|Senegal]]  
 
|-
 
|-
| 1793–1805 || Epidemic  || Severe yellow fever epidemics afflict [[Boston]], [[New York City]] and [[Philadelphia]].<ref name="YELLOW FEVER IN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY">{{cite web|last1=DUFFY|first1=JOHN|title=YELLOW FEVER IN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY|url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1750233/pdf/bullnyacadmed00243-0099.pdf|website=nih.gov|accessdate=7 February 2017}}</ref> || [[United States]]
+
| 1793–1805 || Epidemic  || Severe yellow fever epidemics afflict [[wikipedia:Boston|Boston]], [[wikipedia:New York City|New York City]] and [[wikipedia:Philadelphia|Philadelphia]].<ref name="YELLOW FEVER IN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY">{{cite web|last1=DUFFY|first1=JOHN|title=YELLOW FEVER IN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY|url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1750233/pdf/bullnyacadmed00243-0099.pdf|website=nih.gov|accessdate=7 February 2017}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:United States|United States]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1799 || Organization || Largely in response to the 1793 yellow fever epidemic, the [[Philadelphia Lazaretto]] Quarantine Station on Tinicum Island is built. The station is designed to quarantine infected travelers headed for Philadelphia by ship.<ref name="The history of vaccines">{{cite web|title=The history of vaccines|url=http://www.historyofvaccines.org/timeline#EVT_100426|website=historyofvaccines.org|accessdate=17 February 2017}}</ref> || [[United States]] ([[Philadelphia]])
+
| 1799 || Organization || Largely in response to the 1793 yellow fever epidemic, the [[wikipedia:Philadelphia Lazaretto|Philadelphia Lazaretto]] Quarantine Station on Tinicum Island is built. The station is designed to quarantine infected travelers headed for Philadelphia by ship.<ref name="The history of vaccines">{{cite web|title=The history of vaccines|url=http://www.historyofvaccines.org/timeline#EVT_100426|website=historyofvaccines.org|accessdate=17 February 2017}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:United States|United States]] ([[wikipedia:Philadelphia|Philadelphia]])
 
|-
 
|-
| 1800 || Epidemic || [[Yellow fever]] epidemic breaks out in Spain. Over 60,000 deaths are associated.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[Spain]]
+
| 1800 || Epidemic || [[wikipedia:Yellow fever|Yellow fever]] epidemic breaks out in Spain. Over 60,000 deaths are associated.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[wikipedia:Spain|Spain]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1839–1860 || Epidemic || About 26,000 people in New Orleans contract yellow fever.<ref name="Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease">{{cite web|last1=Brink|first1=Susan|title=Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease|url=http://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2016/08/28/491471697/yellow-fever-timeline-the-history-of-a-long-misunderstood-disease|website=npr.org|accessdate=5 February 2017}}</ref> Three successive epidemics, from 1853 to 1855, kill about 14,000 people in the city.<ref name="YELLOW FEVER IN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY" /> || [[United States]]
+
| 1839–1860 || Epidemic || About 26,000 people in New Orleans contract yellow fever.<ref name="Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease">{{cite web|last1=Brink|first1=Susan|title=Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease|url=http://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2016/08/28/491471697/yellow-fever-timeline-the-history-of-a-long-misunderstood-disease|website=npr.org|accessdate=5 February 2017}}</ref> Three successive epidemics, from 1853 to 1855, kill about 14,000 people in the city.<ref name="YELLOW FEVER IN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY" /> || [[wikipedia:United States|United States]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1848 || Scientific development ||  American physician [[Josiah C. Nott]] floats the idea that [[mosquito]]es may be serving as agents for the dissemination of both [[yellow fever]] and [[malaria]] (However, the full credit for the theory would be given to [[Carlos Finlay]]).<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> ||  
+
| 1848 || Scientific development ||  American physician [[wikipedia:Josiah C. Nott|Josiah C. Nott]] floats the idea that [[wikipedia:mosquito|mosquito]]es may be serving as agents for the dissemination of both [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] and [[wikipedia:malaria|malaria]] (However, the full credit for the theory would be given to [[wikipedia:Carlos Finlay|Carlos Finlay]]).<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> ||  
 
|-
 
|-
| 1878 || Epidemic || About 20,000 people die in an epidemic in towns of the [[Mississippi River]] Valley and its tributaries.<ref name="YELLOW FEVER IN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY" /> || [[United States]]
+
| 1878 || Epidemic || About 20,000 people die in an epidemic in towns of the [[wikipedia:Mississippi River|Mississippi River]] Valley and its tributaries.<ref name="YELLOW FEVER IN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY" /> || [[wikipedia:United States|United States]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1881 || Scientific development || Cuban physician, [[Carlos Finlay]], acting on a theory that [[mosquito]]es carry the yellow fever virus, conducts an experiment with mosquitoes that harbor the disease after biting yellow fever patients. He lets the mosquitoes bite an experimental subject, who then would come down with yellow fever, thus proving the hipothesis. Finlay would be recognized as a pioneer in the research of yellow fever, determining that it is transmitted through mosquitoes.<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[Cuba]]
+
| 1881 || Scientific development || Cuban physician, [[wikipedia:Carlos Finlay|Carlos Finlay]], acting on a theory that [[wikipedia:mosquito|mosquito]]es carry the yellow fever virus, conducts an experiment with mosquitoes that harbor the disease after biting yellow fever patients. He lets the mosquitoes bite an experimental subject, who then would come down with yellow fever, thus proving the hipothesis. Finlay would be recognized as a pioneer in the research of yellow fever, determining that it is transmitted through mosquitoes.<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[wikipedia:Cuba|Cuba]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1898 || Epidemic || During the [[Spanish–American War]], reportedly more soldiers from the [[United States Army]] die of [[yellow fever]] than in battle. This would prompt military efforts for further research and the formation of the [[Reed Yellow Fever Commission]] led by [[Walter Reed]], an American army surgeon.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[Cuba]]
+
| 1898 || Epidemic || During the [[wikipedia:Spanish–American War|Spanish–American War]], reportedly more soldiers from the [[wikipedia:United States Army|United States Army]] die of [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] than in battle. This would prompt military efforts for further research and the formation of the [[wikipedia:Reed Yellow Fever Commission|Reed Yellow Fever Commission]] led by [[wikipedia:Walter Reed|Walter Reed]], an American army surgeon.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[wikipedia:Cuba|Cuba]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1898 || || Yellow fever vector ''[[aedes aegypti]]'' is seen in Brazil for the first time. ''Aedes aegypti'' would be responsible for turning yellow fever into an urban disease in the Americas.<ref name="Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz">{{cite journal|last1=Prata|first1=Aluízio|journal=Departamento de Medicina Tropical, Faculdade de Medicina do Triângulo Mineiro|doi=10.1590/S0074-02762000000700031|url=http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0074-02762000000700031|title=Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref> || [[Brazil]]
+
| 1898 || || Yellow fever vector ''[[wikipedia:aedes aegypti|aedes aegypti]]'' is seen in Brazil for the first time. ''Aedes aegypti'' would be responsible for turning yellow fever into an urban disease in the Americas.<ref name="Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz">{{cite journal|last1=Prata|first1=Aluízio|journal=Departamento de Medicina Tropical, Faculdade de Medicina do Triângulo Mineiro|doi=10.1590/S0074-02762000000700031|url=http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0074-02762000000700031|title=Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:Brazil|Brazil]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1900 || Scientific development || The [[Reed Yellow Fever Commission]] proves that [[yellow fever]] infection is transmitted to humans by [[mosquito]] ''[[Aedes aegypti]]'', which would later be determined to be the [[Vector (epidemiology)|vector]] of the urban transmission cycle of yellow fever virus.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> ||  
+
| 1900 || Scientific development || The [[wikipedia:Reed Yellow Fever Commission|Reed Yellow Fever Commission]] proves that [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] infection is transmitted to humans by [[wikipedia:mosquito|mosquito]] ''[[wikipedia:Aedes aegypti|Aedes aegypti]]'', which would later be determined to be the [[wikipedia:Vector (epidemiology)|vector]] of the urban transmission cycle of yellow fever virus.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> ||  
 
|-
 
|-
| 1905 || Epidemic || The last outbreak of [[yellow fever]] in the United States occurs in [[New Orleans]].<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[United States]]
+
| 1905 || Epidemic || The last outbreak of [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] in the United States occurs in [[wikipedia:New Orleans|New Orleans]].<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[wikipedia:United States|United States]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1906 || Epidemic || An estimated 85% of [[Panama Canal]] workers are hospitalized with either [[malaria]] or [[yellow fever]]. Workers are so terrified of yellow fever that they fly the construction site in droves at the first hint of the disease. Tens of thousands of workers die.<ref name="Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease" /> However, following the demonstration that ''[[Aedes aegypti]]'' mosquitoes are responsible for transmission of the [[yellow fever]] [[virus]] to humans, intense sanitation programs begin in [[Panama]] and [[Havana]], Cuba. These efforts would lead to the eradication of the disease in these areas, and enable the completion of the Panama Canal by 1906.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[Panama]], [[Cuba]]
+
| 1906 || Epidemic || An estimated 85% of [[wikipedia:Panama Canal|Panama Canal]] workers are hospitalized with either [[wikipedia:malaria|malaria]] or [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]]. Workers are so terrified of yellow fever that they fly the construction site in droves at the first hint of the disease. Tens of thousands of workers die.<ref name="Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease" /> However, following the demonstration that ''[[wikipedia:Aedes aegypti|Aedes aegypti]]'' mosquitoes are responsible for transmission of the [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] [[wikipedia:virus|virus]] to humans, intense sanitation programs begin in [[wikipedia:Panama|Panama]] and [[wikipedia:Havana|Havana]], Cuba. These efforts would lead to the eradication of the disease in these areas, and enable the completion of the Panama Canal by 1906.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> || [[wikipedia:Panama|Panama]], [[wikipedia:Cuba|Cuba]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1907 || || To date, [[yellow fever]] has acquired 152 synonyms, including ''American Pestilence'', ''Barbados Distemper'', ''Continua Putrida'', ''Icteroides Caroliniensis'', ''Yellow Jack'', etc.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century">{{cite web|last1=Tomori|first1=Oyewale|title=Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century|url=http://www.redalyc.org/html/843/84322213/|publisher=Red de Revistas Científicas de América Latina y el Caribe, España y Portugal|accessdate=21 February 2017}}</ref> ||
+
| 1907 || || To date, [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] has acquired 152 synonyms, including ''American Pestilence'', ''Barbados Distemper'', ''Continua Putrida'', ''Icteroides Caroliniensis'', ''Yellow Jack'', etc.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century">{{cite web|last1=Tomori|first1=Oyewale|title=Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century|url=http://www.redalyc.org/html/843/84322213/|publisher=Red de Revistas Científicas de América Latina y el Caribe, España y Portugal|accessdate=21 February 2017}}</ref> ||
 
|-
 
|-
| 1909 || || [[Medical Corps (United States Army)|United States Army physician]] [[William C. Gorgas]] states that yellow fever can be eradicated, meaning the disease as a specific entity can be eliminated.<ref name="Eradication of Yellow Fever in New Orleans">{{cite web|title=Eradication of Yellow Fever in New Orleans|url=http://medianola.org/discover/place/1110/Eradication-of-Yellow-Fever-in-New-Orleans-/|website=medianola.org|publisher=[[Tulane University]]|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref> ||
+
| 1909 || || [[wikipedia:Medical Corps (United States Army)|United States Army physician]] [[wikipedia:William C. Gorgas|William C. Gorgas]] states that yellow fever can be eradicated, meaning the disease as a specific entity can be eliminated.<ref name="Eradication of Yellow Fever in New Orleans">{{cite web|title=Eradication of Yellow Fever in New Orleans|url=http://medianola.org/discover/place/1110/Eradication-of-Yellow-Fever-in-New-Orleans-/|website=medianola.org|publisher=[[wikipedia:Tulane University|Tulane University]]|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref> ||
 
|-
 
|-
| 1915 || Organization || The [[Rockefeller Yellow Fever Commission]] of the [[Rockefeller Foundation]] is formed.<ref>{{cite web|title=William C. Gorgas|url=http://www.historyofvaccines.org/content/rockefeller-foundations-yellow-fever-commission-forms|website=historyofvaccines.org|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref> || [[United States]]
+
| 1915 || Organization || The [[wikipedia:Rockefeller Yellow Fever Commission|Rockefeller Yellow Fever Commission]] of the [[wikipedia:Rockefeller Foundation|Rockefeller Foundation]] is formed.<ref>{{cite web|title=William C. Gorgas|url=http://www.historyofvaccines.org/content/rockefeller-foundations-yellow-fever-commission-forms|website=historyofvaccines.org|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:United States|United States]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1925 || Organization || The [[Rockefeller Foundation]] expands its yellow fever activities to Africa, and establishes the '''West African Yellow Fever Commission''' The expedition, based near [[Lagos]], is to determine whether African yellow fever is the same as yellow fever in [[South America]], to find the causative agent (including further search for [[Leptospira]]), and to study its [[epidemiology]].<ref name="The Yellow Fever Vaccine: A History">{{cite journal|last1=Frierson|first1=J. Gordon|title=The Yellow Fever Vaccine: A History|pmc=2892770}}</ref> || [[Africa]]
+
| 1925 || Organization || The [[wikipedia:Rockefeller Foundation|Rockefeller Foundation]] expands its yellow fever activities to Africa, and establishes the '''West African Yellow Fever Commission''' The expedition, based near [[wikipedia:Lagos|Lagos]], is to determine whether African yellow fever is the same as yellow fever in [[wikipedia:South America|South America]], to find the causative agent (including further search for [[wikipedia:Leptospira|Leptospira]]), and to study its [[wikipedia:epidemiology|epidemiology]].<ref name="The Yellow Fever Vaccine: A History">{{cite journal|last1=Frierson|first1=J. Gordon|title=The Yellow Fever Vaccine: A History|pmc=2892770}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:Africa|Africa]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1927 || Scientific development || [[Rockefeller Yellow Fever Commission]] researchers first isolate the causative agent of [[yellow fever]] disease, the yellow fever virus, from a [[Ghanaian]] patient named Asibi. The Asibi yellow fever virus strain is still widely used by scientists today.<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /><ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> ||
+
| 1927 || Scientific development || [[wikipedia:Rockefeller Yellow Fever Commission|Rockefeller Yellow Fever Commission]] researchers first isolate the causative agent of [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] disease, the yellow fever virus, from a [[wikipedia:Ghanaian|Ghanaian]] patient named Asibi. The Asibi yellow fever virus strain is still widely used by scientists today.<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /><ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> ||
 
|-
 
|-
| 1928 || Epidemic || The last documented urban [[yellow fever]] [[epidemic]] in the [[Americas]] occurs in [[Rio de Janeiro]].<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /> || [[Brazil]]
+
| 1928 || Epidemic || The last documented urban [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] [[wikipedia:epidemic|epidemic]] in the [[wikipedia:Americas|Americas]] occurs in [[wikipedia:Rio de Janeiro|Rio de Janeiro]].<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /> || [[wikipedia:Brazil|Brazil]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1937 || Medical development || [[South African]] [[virologist]] [[Max Theiler]] and colleagues develop a live-attenuated vaccine strain, designated 17D, for immunization against yellow fever. The [[yellow fever vaccine]] used today derives from the original 17D strain. Theiler would be later awarded the [[Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine]] for his life-saving research. The [[French neurotropic vaccine]] is also developed in the 1930s, from a strain isolated in [[Senegal]] in 1927.<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /><ref name="Yellow fever disease: density equalizing mapping and gender analysis of international research output">{{cite journal|last1=Bundschuh|first1=Matthias|last2=Groneberg|first2=David A|last3=Klingelhoefer|first3=Doris|last4=Gerber|first4=Alexander|title=Yellow fever disease: density equalizing mapping and gender analysis of international research output|doi=10.1186/1756-3305-6-331|pmc=3843536}}</ref> ||  
+
| 1937 || Medical development || [[wikipedia:South African|South African]] [[wikipedia:virologist|virologist]] [[wikipedia:Max Theiler|Max Theiler]] and colleagues develop a live-attenuated vaccine strain, designated 17D, for immunization against yellow fever. The [[wikipedia:yellow fever vaccine|yellow fever vaccine]] used today derives from the original 17D strain. Theiler would be later awarded the [[wikipedia:Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine|Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine]] for his life-saving research. The [[wikipedia:French neurotropic vaccine|French neurotropic vaccine]] is also developed in the 1930s, from a strain isolated in [[wikipedia:Senegal|Senegal]] in 1927.<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /><ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /><ref name="Yellow fever disease: density equalizing mapping and gender analysis of international research output">{{cite journal|last1=Bundschuh|first1=Matthias|last2=Groneberg|first2=David A|last3=Klingelhoefer|first3=Doris|last4=Gerber|first4=Alexander|title=Yellow fever disease: density equalizing mapping and gender analysis of international research output|doi=10.1186/1756-3305-6-331|pmc=3843536}}</ref> ||  
 
|-
 
|-
| 1940 || Epidemic || The first epidemic confirmed in [[East Africa]] breaks out in central Sudan.<ref name="Yellow Fever Outbreak, Southern Sudan, 2003" /> || [[Sudan]]  
+
| 1940 || Epidemic || The first epidemic confirmed in [[wikipedia:East Africa|East Africa]] breaks out in central Sudan.<ref name="Yellow Fever Outbreak, Southern Sudan, 2003" /> || [[wikipedia:Sudan|Sudan]]  
 
|-
 
|-
| 1942 || Epidemic || Major epidemics of hepatitis occur in United States and Allied troops who have received yellow fever vaccine. The source of the infection would be traced to the serum, or clear fluid in the blood, that is used in the vaccine.<ref>{{cite web|last1=York Morris|first1=Susan|title=The History of Hepatitis C: A Timeline|url=http://www.healthline.com/health/hepatitis-c/hepatitis-c-history|website=healthline.com|accessdate=7 February 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Thomas|first1=Roger E.|last2=Lorenzetti|first2=Diane L.|last3=Spragins|first3=Wendy|title=Mortality and Morbidity Among Military Personnel and Civilians During the 1930s and World War II From Transmission of Hepatitis During Yellow Fever Vaccination: Systematic Review|doi=10.2105/AJPH.2012.301158|accessdate=19 February 2017|pmc=3673520}}</ref> || [[Europe]]
+
| 1942 || Epidemic || Major epidemics of hepatitis occur in United States and Allied troops who have received yellow fever vaccine. The source of the infection would be traced to the serum, or clear fluid in the blood, that is used in the vaccine.<ref>{{cite web|last1=York Morris|first1=Susan|title=The History of Hepatitis C: A Timeline|url=http://www.healthline.com/health/hepatitis-c/hepatitis-c-history|website=healthline.com|accessdate=7 February 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Thomas|first1=Roger E.|last2=Lorenzetti|first2=Diane L.|last3=Spragins|first3=Wendy|title=Mortality and Morbidity Among Military Personnel and Civilians During the 1930s and World War II From Transmission of Hepatitis During Yellow Fever Vaccination: Systematic Review|doi=10.2105/AJPH.2012.301158|accessdate=19 February 2017|pmc=3673520}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:Europe|Europe]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1943 || Epidemic || Yellow fever epidemic breaks out in Bolivia.<ref name="Yellow fever disease: density equalizing mapping and gender analysis of international research output" /> || [[Bolivia]]
+
| 1943 || Epidemic || Yellow fever epidemic breaks out in Bolivia.<ref name="Yellow fever disease: density equalizing mapping and gender analysis of international research output" /> || [[wikipedia:Bolivia|Bolivia]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1950 || || Report shows high rate of postvaccinal encephalitis following administration of the [[yellow fever]] vaccine to infants.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> ||  
+
| 1950 || || Report shows high rate of postvaccinal encephalitis following administration of the [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] vaccine to infants.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> ||  
 
|-
 
|-
| 1954 || Epidemic || The last documented ''[[aedes aegypti]]''-borne [[yellow fever]] epidemic in the [[western hemisphere]] occurs in Trinidad.<ref name="Yellow Fever Vaccine Recommendations of the Immunization Practices Advisory Committee (ACIP)">{{cite web|title=Yellow Fever Vaccine Recommendations of the Immunization Practices Advisory Committee (ACIP)|url=https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00001620.htm|website=cdc.gov|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref> || [[Trinidad and Tobago]]
+
| 1954 || Epidemic || The last documented ''[[wikipedia:aedes aegypti|aedes aegypti]]''-borne [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] epidemic in the [[wikipedia:western hemisphere|western hemisphere]] occurs in Trinidad.<ref name="Yellow Fever Vaccine Recommendations of the Immunization Practices Advisory Committee (ACIP)">{{cite web|title=Yellow Fever Vaccine Recommendations of the Immunization Practices Advisory Committee (ACIP)|url=https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00001620.htm|website=cdc.gov|accessdate=20 February 2017}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:Trinidad and Tobago|Trinidad and Tobago]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1955 || || [[UNICEF]] and the [[World Health Organization]] determine that yellow fever is a worldwide issue that must be tackled together.<ref name="Eradication of Yellow Fever in New Orleans" /> ||
+
| 1955 || || [[wikipedia:UNICEF|UNICEF]] and the [[wikipedia:World Health Organization|World Health Organization]] determine that yellow fever is a worldwide issue that must be tackled together.<ref name="Eradication of Yellow Fever in New Orleans" /> ||
 
|-
 
|-
| 1960–1962 || Epidemic || Yellow fever epidemic breaks out in Ethiopia.100,000 cases and 30,000 deaths are reported.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[Ethiopia]]
+
| 1960–1962 || Epidemic || Yellow fever epidemic breaks out in Ethiopia.100,000 cases and 30,000 deaths are reported.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[wikipedia:Ethiopia|Ethiopia]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1969 || Epidemic || Yellow fever epidemic breaks out in the [[Jos Plateau]], Nigeria. 397 patients were hospitalized and 123 deaths are confirmed.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=CAREY|first1=D. E.|last2=BRES|first2=P|last3=KEMP|first3=G. E.|last4=TROUP|first4=J. M.|last5=WHITE|first5=H. A.|last6=SMITH|first6=E. A.|last7=ADDY|first7=R. F.|last8=FOM|first8=A. L.|last9=PIFER|first9=J.|last10=JONES|first10=E. M.|last11=SHOPE|first11=R. E.|title=Epidemiological aspects of the 1969 yellow fever epidemic in Nigeria|url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2480795/pdf/bullwho00192-0075.pdf|accessdate=21 February 2017}}</ref> || [[Nigeria]]
+
| 1969 || Epidemic || Yellow fever epidemic breaks out in the [[wikipedia:Jos Plateau|Jos Plateau]], Nigeria. 397 patients were hospitalized and 123 deaths are confirmed.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=CAREY|first1=D. E.|last2=BRES|first2=P|last3=KEMP|first3=G. E.|last4=TROUP|first4=J. M.|last5=WHITE|first5=H. A.|last6=SMITH|first6=E. A.|last7=ADDY|first7=R. F.|last8=FOM|first8=A. L.|last9=PIFER|first9=J.|last10=JONES|first10=E. M.|last11=SHOPE|first11=R. E.|title=Epidemiological aspects of the 1969 yellow fever epidemic in Nigeria|url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2480795/pdf/bullwho00192-0075.pdf|accessdate=21 February 2017}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:Nigeria|Nigeria]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1982 || || The French neurotropic vaccine is abandoned due to high rates of postvaccinal encephalitis the vaccine causes. The 17D vaccine becomes the standard for use in immunization for [[yellow fever]] worldwide.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> ||
+
| 1982 || || The French neurotropic vaccine is abandoned due to high rates of postvaccinal encephalitis the vaccine causes. The 17D vaccine becomes the standard for use in immunization for [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] worldwide.<ref name="Timeline of yellow fever" /> ||
 
|-
 
|-
| 1988 || Program launch || The [[World Health Organization]] recommends that vaccination against yellow fever be included in routine infant immunization programs (as of 2009, 22 African countries and 14 South American countries have done so).<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /> ||  
+
| 1988 || Program launch || The [[wikipedia:World Health Organization|World Health Organization]] recommends that vaccination against yellow fever be included in routine infant immunization programs (as of 2009, 22 African countries and 14 South American countries have done so).<ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /> ||  
 
|-
 
|-
| 1992 || Epidemic || A large yellow fever outbreak is confirmed in the [[Rift Valley Province]] of Kenya,<ref name="Yellow Fever Outbreak, Southern Sudan, 2003" /> a country that has been free of YF for more than 50 years.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[Kenya]]
+
| 1992 || Epidemic || A large yellow fever outbreak is confirmed in the [[wikipedia:Rift Valley Province|Rift Valley Province]] of Kenya,<ref name="Yellow Fever Outbreak, Southern Sudan, 2003" /> a country that has been free of YF for more than 50 years.<ref name="Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century" /> || [[wikipedia:Kenya|Kenya]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1998–1999 || Epidemic || 147 cases of [[jungle yellow fever]] are reported in Brazil.<ref name="Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz" /> || [[Brazil]]
+
| 1998–1999 || Epidemic || 147 cases of [[wikipedia:jungle yellow fever|jungle yellow fever]] are reported in Brazil.<ref name="Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz" /> || [[wikipedia:Brazil|Brazil]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 1999 || Epidemic || Yellow fever re-emerges in parts of Brazil that have been silent for several decades. This would challenge prevention strategies and result in frequent revision of yellow fever vaccine recommendations.<ref name="Yellow Fever Outbreaks in Unvaccinated Populations, Brazil, 2008–2009">{{cite journal|editor1-last=Gubler|editor1-first=Duane J.|title=Yellow Fever Outbreaks in Unvaccinated Populations, Brazil, 2008–2009|doi=10.1371/journal.pntd.0002740|pmc=3953027}}</ref> || [[Brazil]]
+
| 1999 || Epidemic || Yellow fever re-emerges in parts of Brazil that have been silent for several decades. This would challenge prevention strategies and result in frequent revision of yellow fever vaccine recommendations.<ref name="Yellow Fever Outbreaks in Unvaccinated Populations, Brazil, 2008–2009">{{cite journal|editor1-last=Gubler|editor1-first=Duane J.|title=Yellow Fever Outbreaks in Unvaccinated Populations, Brazil, 2008–2009|doi=10.1371/journal.pntd.0002740|pmc=3953027}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:Brazil|Brazil]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 2005 || Organization || The [[Yellow Fever Initiative]] is launched as a collaboration between the [[World Health Organization]] and the United Nations Children's Fund ([[UNICEF]]) with support from the [[Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization]] (GAVI Alliance), with aims at securing the precarious yellow fever vaccine supply by creating a vaccine stockpile to be used in outbreak response campaigns as well as to increase the vaccination coverage in the most affected areas by implementation of large preventive mass vaccination campaigns in 12 of the most affected countries in [[West Africa]].<ref name="Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data" /> || [[Africa]]
+
| 2005 || Organization || The [[wikipedia:Yellow Fever Initiative|Yellow Fever Initiative]] is launched as a collaboration between the [[wikipedia:World Health Organization|World Health Organization]] and the United Nations Children's Fund ([[wikipedia:UNICEF|UNICEF]]) with support from the [[wikipedia:Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization|Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization]] (GAVI Alliance), with aims at securing the precarious yellow fever vaccine supply by creating a vaccine stockpile to be used in outbreak response campaigns as well as to increase the vaccination coverage in the most affected areas by implementation of large preventive mass vaccination campaigns in 12 of the most affected countries in [[wikipedia:West Africa|West Africa]].<ref name="Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data" /> || [[wikipedia:Africa|Africa]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 2008 || Epidemic || Yellow fever breaks out in central and southeastern Brazil, northeastern Argentina and Paraguay (after a 34-year absence).<ref name="Yellow Fever Outbreaks in Unvaccinated Populations, Brazil, 2008–2009" /><ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /> || [[Brazil]], [[Argentina]], [[Paraguay]]
+
| 2008 || Epidemic || Yellow fever breaks out in central and southeastern Brazil, northeastern Argentina and Paraguay (after a 34-year absence).<ref name="Yellow Fever Outbreaks in Unvaccinated Populations, Brazil, 2008–2009" /><ref name="Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat" /> || [[wikipedia:Brazil|Brazil]], [[wikipedia:Argentina|Argentina]], [[wikipedia:Paraguay|Paraguay]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 2011 || Program launch || Following an outbreak of yellow fever in northern Uganda in December 2010, the Ministry of Health conducts a massive emergency vaccination campaign. 177 vaccination posts are created, 354 health workers and 590 volunteers from 295 villages are identified and trained.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Bagonza|first1=James|last2=Rutebemberwa|first2=Elizeus|last3=Mugaga|first3=Malimbo|last4=Tumuhamye|first4=Nathan|last5=Makumbi|first5=Issa|title=Yellow fever vaccination coverage following massive emergency immunization campaigns in rural Uganda, May 2011: a community cluster survey|doi=10.1186/1471-2458-13-202|pmc=3608017}}</ref> || [[Uganda]]
+
| 2011 || Program launch || Following an outbreak of yellow fever in northern Uganda in December 2010, the Ministry of Health conducts a massive emergency vaccination campaign. 177 vaccination posts are created, 354 health workers and 590 volunteers from 295 villages are identified and trained.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Bagonza|first1=James|last2=Rutebemberwa|first2=Elizeus|last3=Mugaga|first3=Malimbo|last4=Tumuhamye|first4=Nathan|last5=Makumbi|first5=Issa|title=Yellow fever vaccination coverage following massive emergency immunization campaigns in rural Uganda, May 2011: a community cluster survey|doi=10.1186/1471-2458-13-202|pmc=3608017}}</ref> || [[wikipedia:Uganda|Uganda]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 2013 || Epidemic || African countries report an estimated 130,000 cases of [[yellow fever]] with [[fever]] and [[jaundice]] or [[haemorrhage]], including 78,000 deaths.<ref name="Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data" /> || [[Africa]]
+
| 2013 || Epidemic || African countries report an estimated 130,000 cases of [[wikipedia:yellow fever|yellow fever]] with [[wikipedia:fever|fever]] and [[wikipedia:jaundice|jaundice]] or [[wikipedia:haemorrhage|haemorrhage]], including 78,000 deaths.<ref name="Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data" /> || [[wikipedia:Africa|Africa]]
 
|-
 
|-
| 2016 || Epidemic || A yellow fever outbreak in Angola spreads to the Democratic Republic of Congo, with 3,867 suspected cases in Angola and 2,269 suspected cases in DRC.<ref name="Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease" /> || [[Angola]], [[Democratic Republic of Congo]]
+
| 2016 || Epidemic || A yellow fever outbreak in Angola spreads to the Democratic Republic of Congo, with 3,867 suspected cases in Angola and 2,269 suspected cases in DRC.<ref name="Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease" /> || [[wikipedia:Angola|Angola]], [[wikipedia:Democratic Republic of Congo|Democratic Republic of Congo]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|}
 
|}
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
* [[Timeline of malaria]]
+
* [[wikipedia:Timeline of malaria|Timeline of malaria]]
* [[Timeline of typhus]]
+
* [[wikipedia:Timeline of typhus|Timeline of typhus]]
* [[Timeline of typhoid fever]]
+
* [[wikipedia:Timeline of typhoid fever|Timeline of typhoid fever]]
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
{{Reflist}}
 
{{Reflist}}
  
[[Category:Yellow fever| ]]
+
[[wikipedia:Category:Yellow fever| ]]
[[Category:Medicine timelines]]
+
[[wikipedia:Category:Medicine timelines|Category:Medicine timelines]]

Revision as of 15:29, 13 March 2017

The content on this page is forked from the English Wikipedia page entitled "Timeline of yellow fever". The original page still exists at Timeline of yellow fever. The original content was released under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License (CC-BY-SA), so this page inherits this license.
For a comprehensive treatment of the subject, see History of yellow fever.

This is a timeline of yellow fever. Major events such as historical epidemics and medical developments are described.

Big Picture

Year/period Key developments
17th century Yellow fever infection spreads as the shipping industry and global commerce expand. Large numbers of African slaves, infected with yellow fever, also spread the disease.[1] Early recorded epidemics of yellow fever occur in Barbados, Cuba, Guadeloupe and Mexico.[2]
18th century Yellow fever spreads to Europe.[3] Outbreaks are also reported from areas within West Africa, with far fewer outbreaks being identified in East Africa.[4]
19th century Public health experts continue to believe yellow fever is transmitted by contact with infected patients.[1] At the close of the century, yellow fever is a known and feared pestilence of the western hemisphere and the coastal regions of West Africa, for which no cause or effective treatment is known.[5] Josiah C. Nott and Carlos Finlay link yellow fever to mosquitoes as disease vectors.[2]
1900s Early in the century, aedes aegypti is established as the yellow fever disease vector, and eradication of it in a number of countries, notably Panama, Brazil, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Argentina, leads to the disappearance of urban yellow fever.[6] Yellow fever is eradicated from the United States.[7][3]
1930s Yellow fever vaccines are developed.[3] Massive vaccination campaigns would follow.[2]
1940s–1950s Mass campaigns are conducted using the 17D vaccine in South America and the French neurotropic vaccine in French-controlled areas of Africa. Large scale vaccination campaigns would reduce yellow fever incidence for several decades.[8][3][7] In the 1940s and early 1950s, nearly 40 million doses of FNV would be administered in French-speaking countries of West Africa.[7]
1960s Yellow fever outbreaks occur in both Africa and the Americas. Thousands of cases are reported in West Africa, where vaccination coverage is weak or absent.[3][7]
1980s onwards Incidence of yellow fever increases in Africa. Between 1980 and 2012, 150 yellow fever outbreaks in 26 countries in Africa would be reported to the World Health Organization.[8][3] Early in the 1990s, global estimates of 200,000 cases and 30,000 deaths annually are reported, around 90% of which occur in Africa.[8]
2000s Yellow fever vaccine is incorporated into the routine childhood vaccinations of several South American and African countries, thus decreasing the number of persons susceptible to the disease over time.[3]
Recent years Between 2007 and 2016, 14 countries would complete preventive yellow fever vaccination campaigns.[9] Today, Yellow fever causes 200,000 infections and 30,000 deaths every year, with nearly 90% of these occurring in Africa.Template:Fix/category[citation needed] Forty-four countries in Africa, South and Central America are within the modern yellow fever endemic zone, with almost 900 million people at risk of infection.[7]

Full timeline

thumb|center|500px|WHO-UNICEF estimates of yellow fever vaccine coverage in% in African countries, for the period 1997-2015.[10] thumb|center|500px|WHO-UNICEF estimates of yellow fever vaccine coverage in% in American countries, for the period 1997-2015.[10]

Year/period Type of event Event Geographical location
3000 BP Probable origin of yellow fever in Africa, according to modern sequence analysis of the viral genome.[11] Africa
1494 Epidemic Disease outbreaks similar in signs and symptoms to yellow fever are reported from Canary islands and Cape Verde off the coast of Africa, and sometimes in coastal countries such as Gambia, and Sierra Leone.[2] West Africa
1647 Epidemic The first definitive outbreak of yellow fever in the Americas happens in the island of Barbados.Template:Fix/category[citation needed] Barbados
1648 Epidemic An outbreak is recorded by Spanish colonists in the Yucatán Peninsula, where the indigenous Mayan people call the illness xekik ("blood vomit"). Yellow fever is found in Mayan manuscripts describing an outbreak of the disease in the Yucatan peninsula.[7][3] Mexico
1649 Epidemic Yellow fever is brought in ships to and from Africa and the West Indies, to Gibraltar.[2] Gibraltar
1668 Epidemic The first yellow fever outbreak in English-speaking North America occurs in New York City.[3] United States
1669 Epidemic English colonists in Philadelphia and the French in the Mississippi River Valley record major outbreaks of yellow fever.Template:Fix/category[citation needed] United States
1685 Epidemic Brazil suffers its first yellow fever epidemic, in Recife.[12] Brazil
1730 Epidemic 2,200 deaths are reported in Cadiz, Spain, due to yellow fever, followed by outbreaks in French and British seaports.[3]
1750 Epidemic The term yellow fever is first used by author Griffin Hughes in his book Natural History of Barbadoes.[2][11] Barbados
1778 Epidemic Yellow fever outbreak reportedly decimates English troops stationed at Saint-Louis, Senegal.[2] Senegal
1793–1805 Epidemic Severe yellow fever epidemics afflict Boston, New York City and Philadelphia.[13] United States
1799 Organization Largely in response to the 1793 yellow fever epidemic, the Philadelphia Lazaretto Quarantine Station on Tinicum Island is built. The station is designed to quarantine infected travelers headed for Philadelphia by ship.[14] United States (Philadelphia)
1800 Epidemic Yellow fever epidemic breaks out in Spain. Over 60,000 deaths are associated.[2] Spain
1839–1860 Epidemic About 26,000 people in New Orleans contract yellow fever.[1] Three successive epidemics, from 1853 to 1855, kill about 14,000 people in the city.[13] United States
1848 Scientific development American physician Josiah C. Nott floats the idea that mosquitoes may be serving as agents for the dissemination of both yellow fever and malaria (However, the full credit for the theory would be given to Carlos Finlay).[2]
1878 Epidemic About 20,000 people die in an epidemic in towns of the Mississippi River Valley and its tributaries.[13] United States
1881 Scientific development Cuban physician, Carlos Finlay, acting on a theory that mosquitoes carry the yellow fever virus, conducts an experiment with mosquitoes that harbor the disease after biting yellow fever patients. He lets the mosquitoes bite an experimental subject, who then would come down with yellow fever, thus proving the hipothesis. Finlay would be recognized as a pioneer in the research of yellow fever, determining that it is transmitted through mosquitoes.[7][3] Cuba
1898 Epidemic During the Spanish–American War, reportedly more soldiers from the United States Army die of yellow fever than in battle. This would prompt military efforts for further research and the formation of the Reed Yellow Fever Commission led by Walter Reed, an American army surgeon.[3] Cuba
1898 Yellow fever vector aedes aegypti is seen in Brazil for the first time. Aedes aegypti would be responsible for turning yellow fever into an urban disease in the Americas.[15] Brazil
1900 Scientific development The Reed Yellow Fever Commission proves that yellow fever infection is transmitted to humans by mosquito Aedes aegypti, which would later be determined to be the vector of the urban transmission cycle of yellow fever virus.[3]
1905 Epidemic The last outbreak of yellow fever in the United States occurs in New Orleans.[7][3] United States
1906 Epidemic An estimated 85% of Panama Canal workers are hospitalized with either malaria or yellow fever. Workers are so terrified of yellow fever that they fly the construction site in droves at the first hint of the disease. Tens of thousands of workers die.[1] However, following the demonstration that Aedes aegypti mosquitoes are responsible for transmission of the yellow fever virus to humans, intense sanitation programs begin in Panama and Havana, Cuba. These efforts would lead to the eradication of the disease in these areas, and enable the completion of the Panama Canal by 1906.[3] Panama, Cuba
1907 To date, yellow fever has acquired 152 synonyms, including American Pestilence, Barbados Distemper, Continua Putrida, Icteroides Caroliniensis, Yellow Jack, etc.[2]
1909 United States Army physician William C. Gorgas states that yellow fever can be eradicated, meaning the disease as a specific entity can be eliminated.[16]
1915 Organization The Rockefeller Yellow Fever Commission of the Rockefeller Foundation is formed.[17] United States
1925 Organization The Rockefeller Foundation expands its yellow fever activities to Africa, and establishes the West African Yellow Fever Commission The expedition, based near Lagos, is to determine whether African yellow fever is the same as yellow fever in South America, to find the causative agent (including further search for Leptospira), and to study its epidemiology.[5] Africa
1927 Scientific development Rockefeller Yellow Fever Commission researchers first isolate the causative agent of yellow fever disease, the yellow fever virus, from a Ghanaian patient named Asibi. The Asibi yellow fever virus strain is still widely used by scientists today.[7][2]
1928 Epidemic The last documented urban yellow fever epidemic in the Americas occurs in Rio de Janeiro.[7] Brazil
1937 Medical development South African virologist Max Theiler and colleagues develop a live-attenuated vaccine strain, designated 17D, for immunization against yellow fever. The yellow fever vaccine used today derives from the original 17D strain. Theiler would be later awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his life-saving research. The French neurotropic vaccine is also developed in the 1930s, from a strain isolated in Senegal in 1927.[7][3][18]
1940 Epidemic The first epidemic confirmed in East Africa breaks out in central Sudan.[4] Sudan
1942 Epidemic Major epidemics of hepatitis occur in United States and Allied troops who have received yellow fever vaccine. The source of the infection would be traced to the serum, or clear fluid in the blood, that is used in the vaccine.[19][20] Europe
1943 Epidemic Yellow fever epidemic breaks out in Bolivia.[18] Bolivia
1950 Report shows high rate of postvaccinal encephalitis following administration of the yellow fever vaccine to infants.[3]
1954 Epidemic The last documented aedes aegypti-borne yellow fever epidemic in the western hemisphere occurs in Trinidad.[6] Trinidad and Tobago
1955 UNICEF and the World Health Organization determine that yellow fever is a worldwide issue that must be tackled together.[16]
1960–1962 Epidemic Yellow fever epidemic breaks out in Ethiopia.100,000 cases and 30,000 deaths are reported.[2] Ethiopia
1969 Epidemic Yellow fever epidemic breaks out in the Jos Plateau, Nigeria. 397 patients were hospitalized and 123 deaths are confirmed.[21] Nigeria
1982 The French neurotropic vaccine is abandoned due to high rates of postvaccinal encephalitis the vaccine causes. The 17D vaccine becomes the standard for use in immunization for yellow fever worldwide.[3]
1988 Program launch The World Health Organization recommends that vaccination against yellow fever be included in routine infant immunization programs (as of 2009, 22 African countries and 14 South American countries have done so).[7]
1992 Epidemic A large yellow fever outbreak is confirmed in the Rift Valley Province of Kenya,[4] a country that has been free of YF for more than 50 years.[2] Kenya
1998–1999 Epidemic 147 cases of jungle yellow fever are reported in Brazil.[15] Brazil
1999 Epidemic Yellow fever re-emerges in parts of Brazil that have been silent for several decades. This would challenge prevention strategies and result in frequent revision of yellow fever vaccine recommendations.[22] Brazil
2005 Organization The Yellow Fever Initiative is launched as a collaboration between the World Health Organization and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) with support from the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI Alliance), with aims at securing the precarious yellow fever vaccine supply by creating a vaccine stockpile to be used in outbreak response campaigns as well as to increase the vaccination coverage in the most affected areas by implementation of large preventive mass vaccination campaigns in 12 of the most affected countries in West Africa.[8] Africa
2008 Epidemic Yellow fever breaks out in central and southeastern Brazil, northeastern Argentina and Paraguay (after a 34-year absence).[22][7] Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay
2011 Program launch Following an outbreak of yellow fever in northern Uganda in December 2010, the Ministry of Health conducts a massive emergency vaccination campaign. 177 vaccination posts are created, 354 health workers and 590 volunteers from 295 villages are identified and trained.[23] Uganda
2013 Epidemic African countries report an estimated 130,000 cases of yellow fever with fever and jaundice or haemorrhage, including 78,000 deaths.[8] Africa
2016 Epidemic A yellow fever outbreak in Angola spreads to the Democratic Republic of Congo, with 3,867 suspected cases in Angola and 2,269 suspected cases in DRC.[1] Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Brink, Susan. "Yellow Fever Timeline: The History Of A Long Misunderstood Disease". npr.org. Retrieved 5 February 2017. 
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 Tomori, Oyewale. "Yellow fever in Africa: public health impact and prospects for control in the 21st century". Red de Revistas Científicas de América Latina y el Caribe, España y Portugal. Retrieved 21 February 2017. 
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 "Timeline of yellow fever". cdc.gov. Retrieved 7 February 2017. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 "Yellow Fever Outbreak, Southern Sudan, 2003". PMC 3320285Freely accessible. doi:10.3201/eid1009.030727. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 Frierson, J. Gordon. "The Yellow Fever Vaccine: A History". PMC 2892770Freely accessible. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Yellow Fever Vaccine Recommendations of the Immunization Practices Advisory Committee (ACIP)". cdc.gov. Retrieved 20 February 2017. 
  7. 7.00 7.01 7.02 7.03 7.04 7.05 7.06 7.07 7.08 7.09 7.10 7.11 7.12 Gardner, Christina L.; Ryman, Kate D. "Yellow Fever: A Reemerging Threat". PMC 4349381Freely accessible. doi:10.1016/j.cll.2010.01.001. 
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 Hay, Simon I. (ed.). "Yellow Fever in Africa: Estimating the Burden of Disease and Impact of Mass Vaccination from Outbreak and Serological Data". PMC 4011853Freely accessible. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001638. 
  9. "Yellow fever fact sheets". WHO. Retrieved 20 February 2017. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 "WHO-UNICEF estimates of YFV coverage". WHO. Retrieved 20 February 2017. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 Immunisation against infectious diseases. Great Britain: Department of Health. Retrieved 7 February 2017. 
  12. Bethell, Leslie. Colonial Brazil. Retrieved 7 February 2017. 
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 DUFFY, JOHN. "YELLOW FEVER IN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY" (PDF). nih.gov. Retrieved 7 February 2017. 
  14. "The history of vaccines". historyofvaccines.org. Retrieved 17 February 2017. 
  15. 15.0 15.1 Prata, Aluízio. "Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz". Departamento de Medicina Tropical, Faculdade de Medicina do Triângulo Mineiro. doi:10.1590/S0074-02762000000700031. Retrieved 20 February 2017. 
  16. 16.0 16.1 "Eradication of Yellow Fever in New Orleans". medianola.org. Tulane University. Retrieved 20 February 2017. 
  17. "William C. Gorgas". historyofvaccines.org. Retrieved 20 February 2017. 
  18. 18.0 18.1 Bundschuh, Matthias; Groneberg, David A; Klingelhoefer, Doris; Gerber, Alexander. "Yellow fever disease: density equalizing mapping and gender analysis of international research output". PMC 3843536Freely accessible. doi:10.1186/1756-3305-6-331. 
  19. York Morris, Susan. "The History of Hepatitis C: A Timeline". healthline.com. Retrieved 7 February 2017. 
  20. Thomas, Roger E.; Lorenzetti, Diane L.; Spragins, Wendy. "Mortality and Morbidity Among Military Personnel and Civilians During the 1930s and World War II From Transmission of Hepatitis During Yellow Fever Vaccination: Systematic Review". PMC 3673520Freely accessible. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2012.301158. 
  21. CAREY, D. E.; BRES, P; KEMP, G. E.; TROUP, J. M.; WHITE, H. A.; SMITH, E. A.; ADDY, R. F.; FOM, A. L.; PIFER, J.; JONES, E. M.; SHOPE, R. E. "Epidemiological aspects of the 1969 yellow fever epidemic in Nigeria" (PDF). Retrieved 21 February 2017. 
  22. 22.0 22.1 Gubler, Duane J. (ed.). "Yellow Fever Outbreaks in Unvaccinated Populations, Brazil, 2008–2009". PMC 3953027Freely accessible. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0002740. 
  23. Bagonza, James; Rutebemberwa, Elizeus; Mugaga, Malimbo; Tumuhamye, Nathan; Makumbi, Issa. "Yellow fever vaccination coverage following massive emergency immunization campaigns in rural Uganda, May 2011: a community cluster survey". PMC 3608017Freely accessible. doi:10.1186/1471-2458-13-202. 

Category:Medicine timelines