The Army Malaria Institute: Fifty years of esteemed 'vampire' service

The Golden Jubilee (2016) of the Army Malaria Institute is a significant event in the history not only of the Australian Defence Force, but that of the Australian nation. The Institute's research - entomological, pharmacological, epidemiological and clinical - has been crucial in the maintenanc...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of military and veterans' health. Vol. 25; no. 1; pp. 19 - 22
Main Author J Pearn
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Canberra Department of Defence 01.01.2017
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN1835-1271

Cover

Abstract The Golden Jubilee (2016) of the Army Malaria Institute is a significant event in the history not only of the Australian Defence Force, but that of the Australian nation. The Institute's research - entomological, pharmacological, epidemiological and clinical - has been crucial in the maintenance of optimal healthcare for every operational and humanitarian deployment of Australian servicemen and women since the Second World War. The work of the Institute depends on the diagnosis of both clinical and experimental malaria by blood smear analysis. This basic procedure, ubiquitous to all clinical and preventive health endeavours, has meant that every patient with a fever and every malaria research volunteer are subject to serial bloodtaking. The nickname, "Vampire", was given by apprehensive soldiers to those medics, nurses, pathology technicians and AMI researchers, taking blood. In the Vietnam War, CALLSIGN VAMPIRE and the VAMPIRE PAD (helipad) assumed great significance as a place of rescue, resuscitation and optimal medical treatment. Since the Vietnam War, "Vampires" entered the lexicon of Australian soldiers' neologisms. Such is recalled as a living and enduring witness of 50 years of esteemed service - that every serviceman and woman might be protected from malaria, still in the twenty-first century a major killer of humankind.
AbstractList The Golden Jubilee (2016) of the Army Malaria Institute is a significant event in the history not only of the Australian Defence Force, but that of the Australian nation. The Institute's research - entomological, pharmacological, epidemiological and clinical - has been crucial in the maintenance of optimal healthcare for every operational and humanitarian deployment of Australian servicemen and women since the Second World War. The work of the Institute depends on the diagnosis of both clinical and experimental malaria by blood smear analysis. This basic procedure, ubiquitous to all clinical and preventive health endeavours, has meant that every patient with a fever and every malaria research volunteer are subject to serial bloodtaking. The nickname, "Vampire", was given by apprehensive soldiers to those medics, nurses, pathology technicians and AMI researchers, taking blood. In the Vietnam War, CALLSIGN VAMPIRE and the VAMPIRE PAD (helipad) assumed great significance as a place of rescue, resuscitation and optimal medical treatment. Since the Vietnam War, "Vampires" entered the lexicon of Australian soldiers' neologisms. Such is recalled as a living and enduring witness of 50 years of esteemed service - that every serviceman and woman might be protected from malaria, still in the twenty-first century a major killer of humankind.
Author J Pearn
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  fullname: J Pearn
BookMark eNqFj01LAzEQhnOoYNX-h9x6WsjHbnYjXkpptVLxUs_LNJnYlN1NSWKh_95FBb05M_Be3ueBuSGTIQw4IVPeyKrgoubXZJbSkY0jeVlKPiWr3QHpIvYX-gIdRA90M6Ts80fGe7r2Ll_oBSEmGhzFlBF7tHR-hv7kI85pwnj2Bu_IlYMu4ewnb8nberVbPhXb18fNcrEtoqirXCjLjBJgnXLKWF5LobV1tWiEYKYyjRKNZmzfVLAvSzSNcVbsodLAJFZKW3lLHr69sfe5NaHr0GQfhnSEnFrOWim5av3gwleB16UeT3MuxtUj_vwHhxO43KbxO3P4ZUJ8b23w_8s-ARrfaSs
ContentType Journal Article
DatabaseTitleList

DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Medicine
EndPage 22
ExternalDocumentID 10.3316/informit.174974991121219
Genre History
GroupedDBID 5VS
AAWTL
ABDBF
ACUHS
AH1
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ARTTT
EAZ
EMI
ESX
EX3
KPA
KQ8
P2P
TR2
TUS
WOW
~8M
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-r275t-6d0c62adf6f6cd173299df728220c5c8628900b85ab44ec8cfd2ba59a03e569d3
ISSN 1835-1271
IngestDate Tue Sep 23 20:46:46 EDT 2025
Wed Sep 24 03:55:13 EDT 2025
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 1
Language English
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-r275t-6d0c62adf6f6cd173299df728220c5c8628900b85ab44ec8cfd2ba59a03e569d3
Notes Journal of Military and Veterans Health, Vol. 25, No. 1, Jan 2017, 19-22
Informit, Melbourne (Vic)
PageCount 4
ParticipantIDs rmit_collectionsjats_10_3316_informit_174974991121219
rmit_apaft_search_informit_org_doi_10_3316_informit_174974991121219
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 20170101
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2017-01-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 01
  year: 2017
  text: 20170101
  day: 01
PublicationDecade 2010
PublicationPlace Canberra
PublicationPlace_xml – name: Canberra
PublicationTitle Journal of military and veterans' health.
PublicationYear 2017
Publisher Department of Defence
Publisher_xml – name: Department of Defence
SSID ssj0000314431
Score 1.9884051
Snippet The Golden Jubilee (2016) of the Army Malaria Institute is a significant event in the history not only of the Australian Defence Force, but that of the...
SourceID rmit
SourceType Publisher
StartPage 19
SubjectTerms Australia
Australian Army
Medical care
Methodology
Mosquitoes as carriers of disease
Soldiers
Title The Army Malaria Institute: Fifty years of esteemed 'vampire' service
URI http://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.174974991121219
Volume 25
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1La9tAEF7aFEovpU-atil7KORgFLTSriT3lsQxoeDSQwK5idU-iguxg6wG0l_fbx-Sa9PQJBdhr1kj7TfMfDOaByGfucq0VkYmjCuZ8IKrpIKZxVfRmIwp2_hZBLNvxek5_3ohLvpZ8rG6pGsO1O9_1pU8BFWsAVdXJXsPZIc_xQI-A19cgTCud8YYSN2MZhIO6lyuX_07R386t2DYNxBln67hApsGtg9gl9fy8soHpcvRKiiLW0jqpW_i3YYmTdcudcYT7zLWTx4MCTij7y7G8ncMgZVbMYQJLF_b9ckHE2NNL3BBKYKlJSwLo1J6rRnKlTekI6jAqAGDMQ01x5ttrrfMz5AU6AIIuQ8lhJ6xczcwmcPfAYVlsLCuuevjnEGZPTk8mhxNh1Ca68DP_eTJ4U43-iF4qnD2gjyPx0cPA2AvySOzeEWezmIWw2tyAtyow41G3OiA2xfqUaMeNbq0tEeN7kfM9mlE7A05n56cHZ8mcZxF0mal6JJCp6rIpLaFLZRmZQ4moG3p8nhTJRRcy2qcpk0lZMO5UZWyOmukGMs0N6IY6_wt2VksF-YdoVwqwQqTWw02qKSFSQOTdFQjz2XF7C45do9fg29BsIPOrPtTrZftjxoGs4b_5w58_cPWce8S4ZedRvJ5gYvVT9mt_rvv_QP3fSDP1sL5kex07S-zB8rXNZ8i5H8AybpZkw
linkProvider EBSCOhost
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=The+Army+Malaria+Institute%3A+Fifty+years+of+esteemed+%27vampire%27+service&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+military+and+veterans%27+health.&rft.au=J+Pearn&rft.date=2017-01-01&rft.pub=Department+of+Defence&rft.issn=1835-1271&rft.volume=25&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=19&rft.epage=22&rft.externalDBID=n%2Fa&rft.externalDocID=10.3316%2Finformit.174974991121219
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1835-1271&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1835-1271&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1835-1271&client=summon