16 matches out of all 3,298, 1 to 16 displayed.
1877 | BankuraTenth Annual Report of the Sanitary Commission for Bengal - Report from Dr Ghose on leprosy in district of Rungpore and Bankoora (Bankura) District. [Leprosarium] [India] |
1901 | BankuraThe leprosarium was founded. Source: Report on Leprosy and its Control in India by the Committee appointed by the Central Advisory Board of Health (1941). Government of India Press, New Dehli, 1942, p. 58. [Leprosarium] [India] |
1904 | BankuraBankura asylum Rs. 1,000 to the asylum for providing additional accommodation for lepers West Bengal State Archives [Leprosarium] [India] |
1904 | BankuraIn May 1904, a grant was made to the Bankura asylum from the special allotment of Rs. 12,50, 000 for Civil Buildings West Bengal State Archives [Leprosarium] [India] |
1907 | BankuraIn December, 1907, a capitation grant was made to the Bankura asylum which was maintained by the Mission to Lepers in India and the East West Bengal State Archives [Leprosarium] [India] |
1908 | BankuraA grant of Rs. 850 was made available for the construction of a new building for the female lepers at the Bankura asylum and Rs. 1,872 for three years, pending the settlement of a question of bringing the Asylum under the operation of the Leper's Act West Bengal State Archives [Leprosarium] [India] |
1927 | BankuraTLM, Kalimpong, Dr Macdonald Smith (Cochrane) [Leprosarium] [India] |
1929 | BankuraAraujo, H C S, 'India: Leprosario de Bankura'. Extract from A Lepra - Estudos realizados em 40 paizes - 1924-1927 - Work of Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, 1929, 237. Source: Keffer, L, Índice Bibliográfico da Lepra:1.500-1.944, Vol II, I-P. Biblioteca do Departamento da Lepra do São Paulo, Brasil, 1946. [Leprosarium] [India] |
1931 | BankuraJackson, J T, 'Report on the Bankura Leper Home for 1930'. Lep. India, 1931:3 (2) 89. Source: Keffer, L, Índice Bibliográfico da Lepra:1.500-1.944, Vol II, I-P. Biblioteca do Departamento da Lepra do São Paulo, Brasil, 1946. [Leprosarium] [India] |
1931 | BankuraDirected by Rev RA Roberts, MRCP. The home had a population of 200, and a maximum capacity for 228. Accommodation consisted of 14 wards, in two large and two small buildings. Treatment was overseen by Dr JM Bannerji, LMF, and 2 medical assistants. Source: League of Nations Archive: File 29098. [Leprosarium] [India] |
1934 | BankuraLeprosy Work and Investigation Centre (Dr K R Chatterji) Leprosy Review [Leprosarium] [India] |
1935 | BankuraReport from Muir and Chatterji on Leper Home, Clinics under District Boards and a Medical School Leprosy Review 6.1 (1935): 24-29 [Leprosarium] [India] |
1941 | BankuraIn the government census of 1941, in the Bankura district of Bengal, 422 cases were found in a population of 10,240. 'Epidemiological and Clinical Studies of Leprosy in the Bankura District of Bengal' Leprosy in India 13 (1941): 127-134. [Leprosarium] [India] |
1941 | BankuraIn 1941 the colony had accommodation for 225 patients, and was run by the Mission to Lepers. Source: Report on Leprosy and its Control in India by the Committee appointed by the Central Advisory Board of Health (1941). Government of India Press, New Dehli, 1942, p. 58. [Leprosarium] [India] |
1945 | BankuraReferred to by Dharmendra Leprosy in India [Leprosarium] [India] |
2002 | BankuraDr Manas Kumar Kundu, MO in charge, The Leprosy Mission, Bankura Leprosy Control Programme, PO Box 27, PO Junbedia, Bankura - 722 101, West Bengal. [Leprosarium] [India] |