Overview
The early 20th century saw a proliferation in public health and biomedical research - research that is still relevant today. Much of this information had been 'lost' in unused and forgotten print volumes that have not been available to the wider academic community.
Global Health Archive changed that. The archive is a fully searchable modern database of research dating from 1910 to 1983, containing 800,000 records derived from six printed abstract journals.
Global Health Archive helps researchers to:
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avoid replicating past research
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give a historical context to their research
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locate previously difficult-to-find or 'lost' material
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find references that were previously inaccessible
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enhance their existing knowledge
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track changes in scientific and cultural activities
The records have been indexed and calssified to make them relevant to a modern audience using current terminology to aid retrieval. Descriptors and CABICodes, used alongside free text searching, provide an effective route into this historical data.
The complete picture
Global Health Archive is fully compatible with Global Health and can be searched alongside it for records from 1910 to the present day. Together they provide a global picture of international public health research both past and present.
By digitizing our print archive, CABI has made this information available to a modern audience by placing current international and public health problems in a historical context.
Searching the past...informing the future
In the last few years avian influenza or 'bird flu' and recently 'swine flu' have become international concerns for those who work in public health and biomedical disease prevention areas. Global Health Archive contains valuable records ideal for research into this much talked about area.
Much of the data from the Global Health Archive is derived from publications that have long since vanished. They tell us a great deal about past epidemics, from rates and patterns of transmission, duration of pandemics, timing of epidemiological peaks, geographic distribution of diseases, government preparedness and quarantine provisions; through to effects on different age and social groups, severity in developing vs. developed countries, symptoms, causes of mortality (such as secondary problems like pneumonia) and mortality rates.
By accessing this kind of historical information, the Global Health Archive has the potential to reveal vital clues by referring back to previous pandemics to identify what made them so deadly and the mistakes made in their management.
What users have to say
"...having additional access to the Global Health Archive has made it (Global Health) a truly invaluable resource"
Jane Falconer, Information Services Librarian, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK
Dialog
OvidSP
EBSCO
Thomson Web of Knowledge
CAB Direct (CABI's own platform)
Coverage
Records in the Global Health Archive are derived from six printed abstract journals
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Tropical Diseases Bulletin (1912-83)
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Abstracts on Hygiene and Communicable Diseases (1926-83)
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Review of Veterinary and Medical Entomology (1913-72)
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Review of Veterinary and Medical Mycology (1943-72)
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Nutrition Abstracts and Reviews (1931-72)
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Helminthological Abstracts (1932-72)
Global Health Archive contains records on:
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Public Health
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Tropical and Communicable Diseases
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Nutrition
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Parasitology
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Entomology
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Mycology
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