Sleeping Sickness: Final Report of the Mission to the Island of Principe (1912–1914) offers a detailed record of a focused public health campaign against a deadly epidemic.
This nonfiction work explains how health officials planned and carried out a sanitary campaign on Principe, describes the organization of the Official Sanitary Brigade, and documents the measures taken to protect workers, manage disease risk, and reduce transmission. Rich with period data, it traces the rise and fall of sleeping sickness on the island and surveys the broader health outcomes of the community.
- Learn the sequence of actions used to combat a tropical disease, from field work to policy implementation.
- See how sanitary improvements were organized, financed, and applied to both estates and public lands.
- Explore the challenges of disease surveillance, laboratory testing, and epidemiological reporting in a colonial context.
- Review the outcomes, including changes in mortality and the factors that influenced long-term health on the island.
Ideal for readers of public health history, tropical medicine, and colonial-era governance, who want a grounded look at early 20th‑century disease control in practice.