Abstract

Open AccessMoreSectionsView PDF ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack Citations ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditEmail Cite this article Gomea Taka 2008‘We had to climb mountains and cross fast-flowing rivers’Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B3633643–3644http://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2008.4012SectionOpen AccessArticles‘We had to climb mountains and cross fast-flowing rivers’ Taka Gomea Taka Gomea Google Scholar Find this author on PubMed Search for more papers by this author Taka Gomea Taka Gomea Google Scholar Find this author on PubMed Search for more papers by this author Published:27 November 2008https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2008.4012It was Dr Vincent Zigas who first started research into kuru and Dr Carleton Gajdusek joined him later. Vincent would drop us off and pick us up with his Landrover and we would patrol through the kuru-affected region with Carleton. Vincent was from Europe and we had great difficulty in understanding his Tok Pisin. He knew this, so he would purposely talk in a way that made us laugh. He was a good-natured man and was always reminding us to take care of Carleton when we were patrolling.When we patrolled with Carleton it was under difficult conditions; we had to climb mountains and cross fast-flowing rivers. When we approached some villages they tried to chase us away, threatening us with their bows and arrows. We would placate them by giving them salt and other small presents.The longest patrol that I took part in was to Menyamya via Agakamatasa, Dunkwi, Simbari and Mt Yelia. From Menyamya we took a plane to Lae, where Carleton left to go to America. After cleaning ourselves, Anua, Masasa, Tiu, Tose, Haus Kapa and I boarded a Dakota cargo plane bound for Kainantu. When we were about to land in Kainantu the plane's cargo doors flew open and I went and told the plane's crew. We all held on to the co-pilot so he could lean out of the plane and grab the doors and close them. When we landed the pilot told us that if we had not closed the doors we would have all died. Then we walked back to Okapa aided by a kerosene lamp.Jack Baker sent me to Goroka to train as an aid post orderly and afterwards I became an ambulance driver at Port Moresby General Hospital. In Moresby ‘the man from the mountains’ married a girl from the coast and we have lived happily ever since.Finally, I would just like to say that I really wanted kuru to stop and that is why I was happy to work so hard. Previous ArticleNext Article VIEW FULL TEXT DOWNLOAD PDF FiguresRelatedReferencesDetailsCited byCollinge J and Alpers M (2008) Introduction, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 363:1510, (3607-3612), Online publication date: 27-Nov-2008. This Issue27 November 2008Volume 363Issue 1510Theme Issue ‘The end of kuru: 50 years of research into an extraordinary disease’ compiled by John Collinge and Michael P. Alpers Article InformationDOI:https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2008.4012PubMed:18849257Published by:Royal SocietyPrint ISSN:0962-8436Online ISSN:1471-2970History: Published online27/11/2008Published in print27/11/2008 License:Copyright © 2008 The Royal SocietyThis is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Citations and impact PDF Download Subjectshealth and disease and epidemiology

Highlights

  • Port Moresby, c/o Papua New Guinea Institute of Medical Research, PO Box 60, Goroka, EHP 441, Papua New Guinea

  • In my letter to the editor of the Lancet of 5 September 1959, I pointed out the striking similarity of kuru and scrapie and suggested that kuru, like scrapie, might be a transmissible disease expressed after a long incubation period (Hadlow 1959)

  • A year later parasitologist William Jellison, a friend and colleague from Rocky Mountain Laboratory, Hamilton, Montana, where I had worked before coming to England, visited my wife and me in Compton on the afternoon of 28 June 1959

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Summary

Introduction

It was Dr Vincent Zigas who first started research into kuru and Dr Carleton Gajdusek joined him later. When we patrolled with Carleton it was under difficult conditions; we had to climb mountains and cross fast-flowing rivers. Kuru likened to scrapie: the story remembered

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