- Urbani, Carlo
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▪ 2004Italian epidemiologist (b. Oct. 19, 1956, Castelplanio, Italy—d. March 29, 2003, Bangkok, Thai.), recognized that the SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) outbreak was an epidemic and raised the alarm, allowing the disease to be somewhat contained, before dying himself of SARS. Urbani began working in Africa as soon as he got his medical degree, and he became an expert in parasitic diseases. In the 1990s he undertook a number of missions in Africa for the World Health Organization (WHO) on controlling disease caused by parasitic worms. Doctors Without Borders hired him for work in Cambodia, where he made important advances in the control of parasitic worms. In 1999 he was made president of the Italian chapter of Doctors Without Borders. In 2000 WHO made him director of infectious diseases for the Western Pacific Region, based in Hanoi. In February 2003 Urbani was called to the Vietnam-France Hospital in Hanoi when an American who had arrived from Hong Kong was hospitalized with atypical pneumonia. Urbani quickly recognized the highly contagious nature of the disease, instituted strenuous anti-infection measures, and called in the health authorities. By mid-March the hospital had been quarantined. Urbani was credited with shutting down the disease in Vietnam, and his action led to WHO's worldwide alert. Urbani had just arrived in Bangkok for a conference when he realized that he had contracted SARS.
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Universalium. 2010.