Home »
News
»
Men in Green
Men in Green
31 May 2023
Time
Along the malarial marshes and through the tropical lowland jungle ride
Venezuela's green-uniformed soldiers of health. From their gaudy yellow
trucks they dismount at the doorways of palm-thatched huts to spray
walls and dark corners with DDT-guns. In two years of spraying, the
malaria fighters have cleared the mosquito from 200,000 houses and all
but wiped out malaria in one-third of the nation.
The campaign got started almost by chance. In the spring of 1945,
Venezuela's chief malaria expert, young Arnoldo Gabaldon, was in
Washington for a Pan-American health conference. At lunch one day, Dr.
James Stevens (now dean of the Harvard School of Public Health) told
him what DDT was doing for the Army in the southwest Pacific. Gabaldon
was "terribly excited."
Back in Venezuela, Gabaldón reviewed his problem. Half of his
countrymen suffered from malaria at one time or another. It broke the
spirit as well as the body. "People with malaria just don't care," says
Gabaldón. "They don't even care if you treat them." As a Rockefeller
Foundation fellow in protozoology, Gabaldón had learned that the
chronic malarial "lose even the desire to procreate." Gabaldón decided
to go all out for DDT.
Maracay, a malaria-ridden coffee town, was made the proving ground. DDT
squads were recruited, and a fine, white-stone laboratory, office and
warehouse were built. Some 100,000 children were examined and more than
three million home visits were made. In time Maracay was declared
malaria-free and the area of treatment was expanded.
Last week, in the musty halls of Caracas' Central University,
39-year-old Arnoldo Gabaldón rose to receive a nation's thanks. Flanked
by six cabinet ministers, Gabaldón told of what had been done. "We are
now able to dominate this great plague of the nation," he said. "In all
probability we will be the first tropical country to defeat the
disease."
https://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,779625,00.html