Public health, in my mind, is a practical science. Our aim is to get the best benefit for our people’s health with up-to-date knowledge and available resources of personnel and facilities within a minimum of time. Health workers should not satisfy themselves with a few training centers or a few demonstration centers. The success of such trainings or demonstrations lies [in] whether these would solve the existing health problem and whether these are practical.Footnote 1
By repeatedly stressing the term “practical,” Tao Rongjin (T’ao Jung-Chin), the leading expert at the tuberculosis control program supported by the World Health Organization (WHO) in Taiwan, exemplified the pragmatism shared by most of his colleagues in Taiwanese health organizations. Tao was part of a cohort of Taiwanese public health experts, trained in the United States and employed by the health administration and research institutes of the Republic of China (ROC), which had been based in Taiwan since 1949. Such experts acted as intermediaries for international organizations and the ROC’s health agencies, and they strove to obtain financial and technical aid from foreign health organizations so as to implement public health measures in Taiwan. Statistics, as the lingua franca of health programs within the framework of the WHO, served as an essential tool for communicating with the organization’s headquarters in Geneva.
In this chapter, I explore these experts’ practices and strategies with regard to the statistical collection systems used in the WHO’s epidemic control campaigns from 1948 to the 1960s: a period in which the WHO initially expanded its budget for programs centered on a single technology. It was also a period that Anne-Emanuelle Birn describes as the “bureaucratization and professionalization” stage of international health, when international health collaboration was centralized under the auspices of the WHO thanks to its more extensive membership in comparison with its predecessors.Footnote 2 As presented in the previous chapter, the WHO aimed to centralize all statistics for administration, research, and policy-making. The organization’s founding staff saw statistics as a medium for sharing information between health administrations, researchers, and policy-makers. The WHO health statistics division thus became the rule-setter for epidemic control programs. This chapter will examine how experts, including those based in Geneva and Taiwan, integrated statistical collection into WHO-led disease control fieldwork, and how numbers were mobilized in the WHO’s policy-making process.
Existing historiographies have shed light on how statistics were omnipresent in programs such as epidemic control, family planning, nutrition, and psychiatry.Footnote 3 I take the further step of investigating how statistical practices were designed and implemented, and how statistical practices changed the course of public health programs. Drawing on WHO archives as well as the ROC government archives in Taiwan, I examine how WHO statisticians designed statistical practices for its malaria control program (which later became the Global Malaria Eradication Program [GMEP]) and tuberculosis control program, the two flagship efforts of the WHO’s first decade. I also detail how the WHO’s statistical system for planning and evaluating campaigns on the ground was taken up by Taiwanese experts. Historiographies that cover the Taiwanese government’s interactions with foreign aid agencies (including United Nations agencies, the United States government aid agency, and other philanthropic foundations) often focus on a specific program, such as malaria control, tuberculosis control, or family planning.Footnote 4 This group of historiographies lays a solid foundation; however, it pays little attention to how statistical information collected in public health fieldwork was shared and used in policy-making between the ROC government and the WHO.
I will begin by offering an account of the core roles accorded to statistics by the WHO for connecting fieldwork administration, research, and policy-making within the malaria and tuberculosis control programs; the organization relied here on quantified standards and collected numbers to govern the programs from a distance. This statistical system – which connected WHO experts, Taiwanese officers, and field staff – had a serious potential for impact, as producing favorable numbers eventually became the main aim of fieldwork. Statistics became a pervasive part of policy advocacy as experts presented, cited, and discussed numbers as part of the policy-making process. Though the experts ceded some of their authority to numbers, they were still a salient part of the policy-making process thanks to their role in curating and making sense of those numbers.
Fieldwork Administration, Research, and Policy-Making in Disease Control Programs
The WHO’s founding statisticians were in charge of setting standards for statistical practices within the organization’s public health programs. To ensure the reliability of statistics collected in the field, Satya Swaroop, a former associate professor at the All India Institute and chief of the statistical studies section of the WHO’s health statistics division, organized expert committees to discuss discrepancies between methodology and reality.Footnote 5 Participants in the committees discussed sampling methodologies for morbidity statistics in 1958, the conduct of health surveys in 1960, and the uses of statistics in public health fieldwork studies in 1972.Footnote 6 During these discussions, a wide range of sampling and survey approaches were listed, with the aim of integrating laboratory principles into public health fieldwork by devising control groups and treatment groups, then comparing the results.
The statisticians’ focus on survey methodologies vividly demonstrates the WHO’s hopes of relying on quantification to govern from a distance.Footnote 7 Through rigorously devised methods, the organization aimed to impose a grammar on the language of statistics and paint a reliable picture of the situation on the ground that experts – whether based in Geneva or within local health authorities – could comprehend.Footnote 8 Following the same rationale, WHO statisticians also devised a statistical apparatus within the organization to oversee and manage the statistics collected from epidemic control initiatives. For each initiative, the health statistics division published instructions for collecting and analyzing quantitative data.
A prime example was the GMEP, launched by the WHO in 1955. Having witnessed the early success of insecticide DDT (dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane) spraying campaigns against malaria in Europe and Latin America, the WHO used DDT spraying for its malaria control program since the organization opened its door. In 1955, the organization further decided that the GMEP could reduce its budget for malaria control by rapidly eradicating the disease once and for all through intense DDT spraying that would kill mosquitoes and stop malaria transmission before mosquitoes became resistant and the chemical lost its effectiveness.Footnote 9 The original malaria control programs had had the same budget every triennium, and the GMEP would cap that budget. Moreover, WHO experts contended that money spent on the GMEP was an investment with a foreseeable return: more available manpower.Footnote 10 The GMEP was the WHO’s core project during the 1950s and 1960s. By the time it ended in 1969, a total of $1.4 billion had been spent on it.Footnote 11
WHO staff believed that statistics collected from fieldwork would be the key to eradicating malaria quickly, allowing them to keep track of existing malaria cases and report to the administration for follow-up.Footnote 12 The Sixth Expert Committee on Malaria expressed the WHO’s official vision: the GMEP was a “well-administrated attack based on epidemiological studies.” WHO experts further explained, in a technical report, that “it [was] not only necessary to make plans sufficiently in advance, but to keep data and their analysis flowing at a speed that [would] allow profitable use of the information and the prompt correction of errors.”Footnote 13 Committee members thus had faith that statistics would lead to rapid policy adjustments.
For similar reasons, the health statistics division published statistical manuals for malaria control fieldwork as early as 1956, one year after the launch of the GMEP. Swaroop first published Statistical Notes for Malaria Workers in 1956, and an amended version, Statistical Methodology in Malaria Work, in 1957. These manuals set forth methodologies for sampling and recording health statistics in the field and explained the principles behind statistical tests.Footnote 14 Swaroop subsequently published books on statistical practices that were even more tailored to the implementation of the GMEP: Statistical Considerations and Methodology in Malaria Eradication (1959) and the posthumous Statistical Methods in Malaria Eradication (1966), which set forth standardized collection procedures for the preparation, attack, consolidation, and maintenance phases of the GMEP.Footnote 15
Every aspect of the GMEP was quantified in some way, whether in terms of standards or survey methods that aimed to quantify conditions on the spot. For instance, the Expert Committee specified the amount of DDT spray required to meet the normal criterion of efficacy, a dose of 2.0 g/m2, stating that this was more likely to be effective on most types of surfaces.Footnote 16 And Swaroop’s manuals contained statistical methods for evaluating the resistance of the Anopheles mosquitoes to DDT and the proper sampling methods for evaluating residual DDT on household surfaces.
The image above illustrates how the GMEP was administered from a distance using statistical practices. A punch-card system, designed by Swaroop, facilitated the calculation and monitoring of malaria cases around the world.Footnote 17 On the ground, health service providers recorded each malaria patient on a punch card that also contained their personal information and symptoms (see Figure 6.1). The cards were then sent to a national malaria research center, supported by the WHO, for further analysis. The research center then reported the raw data, along with its analysis, to the WHO.
Statistics were used to convey the local situation to Geneva (the center of policy-making), but experts made use of their own knowledge to decide how to present the quantified outcomes. In 1966, eleven years after the official launch of the GMEP, the Expert Committee on Malaria published a map that showed all fifty-two countries that had taken part in the GMEP, even though only ten of them had actually eradicated malaria.Footnote 18 The results were not as good as expected, but the committee did not acknowledge that in its discourse. Instead, it attributed the disappointing results to external causes and insisted on the GMEP’s potential for success. The committee explained that they “acutely realize[d] the differences between different regions of the world,” and that the GMEP’s previous level of funding was insufficient because the value of local currencies was dropping,Footnote 19 all the while stressing the program’s significance by enumerating how many people it covered.Footnote 20 The poor quantified results did not lead to the immediate discontinuation of the program. It was not until three years later that the World Health Assembly finally ended the GMEP, as the growing financial burden, resistance to DDT and antimalarial drugs, and a lack of flexibility in implementation had exhausted member states’ enthusiasm for the program.Footnote 21
The GMEP was not the only program to be managed through extensive quantification. During the same period, the WHO’s tuberculosis control program also made use of an overarching statistical system, including standardized punch cards for recording cases and a random sampling methodology applied to prevalence surveys. To ensure the system was implemented, the WHO dispatched epidemiological experts either to supervise the use of statistical methods in the field or to implement such methods themselves. In 1957, for example, the WHO sent a consultant, Truls Zeiner-Henriksen, to Taiwan for six months to establish a central tuberculosis registry there.Footnote 22 And in 1960, F. A. Assad, an epidemiologist and statistician from the United Arab Republic, was sent to standardize the coding numbers of punch cards based on a recording system set forth in document WHO/CENTS/53/3, with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) providing funding for machine tabulation.Footnote 23
Just as with the GMEP, the WHO relied on quantification to provide preliminary answers and to govern its tuberculosis program from a distance. Unlike for malaria, WHO staff did not have an official stand on the best way to tackle tuberculosis across the world, although a resolution had been adopted at the First World Health Assembly in 1948 that made the Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG) vaccine an integral part of the organization’s tuberculosis control program.Footnote 24 Given the controversy surrounding the efficacy of the BCG vaccine, the WHO was unwilling to embrace a mass vaccination campaign right away. Instead, it established the Tuberculosis Research Office in Copenhagen, which placed strong emphasis on statistical methods. Citing the “operational research” method, in which mathematical models are used to determine the best solution in military situations,Footnote 25 the Office called for the use of standardized statistical methods to collect global tuberculosis statistics so as to determine the best way to respond to epidemics.Footnote 26 The Office was responsible for surveying tuberculosis prevalence rates before launching mass immunization campaigns, recording the results of tuberculin tests on schoolchildren, and examining changes in prevalence rates after the implementation of BCG vaccination campaigns. As part of an international tuberculosis control campaign supported by UNICEF and Scandinavian voluntary organizations – which hoped to implement BCG vaccination all over the world – the Tuberculosis Research Office dispatched Chinese expert Yuan Yijin, the first statistician trained at Peking Union Medical College (PUMC) (see Chapter 2), to countries such as Greece, Syria, Egypt, India, and Ecuador from 1948 to 1951 to compile statistical data on tuberculosis and the BCG vaccine.Footnote 27
Contrary to expectations, the mass collection of statistical data did not provide a firm answer as to the efficacy of the BCG vaccine. For instance, although some BCG vaccination campaigns had satisfying results, United States Public Health Service trials in Puerto Rico and the American states of Georgia and Alabama showed protection rates of only 31 percent and 36 percent, respectively.Footnote 28 It was thus up to WHO experts to decide which strategy to adopt and how to justify it. As Christian McMillen has convincingly argued, the WHO’s policy choices were not solely dependent on statistical results but in large part based on experts’ understanding of public health work in different regions of the world. Halfdan Mahler, by that time a WHO tuberculosis adviser, favored BCG vaccination and argued that tuberculosis required a pragmatic solution. Mahler also contended that, as properly administrated in-home treatment was not feasible in poorer countries, the BCG vaccine was an ideal compromise owing to its low cost and lack of side effects.Footnote 29 McMillen presents a convincing case that numbers played a greater role in justifying policy choices than in actually making those choices, as Mahler turned to old data to bolster his argument. Because recent projects had failed to produce significant results, Mahler instead cited statistics from Joseph Aronson’s 1938 trial, which showed 80 percent efficacy.Footnote 30 Notably, this 80 percent efficacy was not enough to convince WHO experts to fully embrace the BCG vaccine in the late 1940s, and yet this efficacy rate eventually became the best known statistic in the 1950s, and continued to be cited by Mahler, who went on to become chief of the tuberculosis unit in 1962.Footnote 31
Mahler was not alone in cherry-picking statistics to support his policy choices. In published reports, other WHO experts also used their overall knowledge of the vaccine and the trial designs to challenge the quantified results produced by field trials, which had put the BCG vaccine’s reputation in danger. As Niels Brimnes writes, WHO experts consistently used the inclusion of individuals of low-grade sensitivity and the existence of various BCG sub-strains as a “joker card” – to use Brimnes’ wording – to explain why field trials did not show a sufficient degree of protection.Footnote 32 Specifically, WHO experts used such arguments to invalidate trials that showed a low degree of protection. In this way, they were able to claim that the BCG vaccine’s degree of protection remained unknown. For example, experts participating in a WHO-sponsored seminar on tuberculosis in Nairobi in the 1960s again insisted on the value of the vaccine, despite a lack of direct proof as to its degree of protection.Footnote 33
Similar methods of selectively presenting statistics were also employed in support of in-home therapy for tuberculosis patients. The WHO exhibited varying attitudes regarding field trials of in-home therapy organized by the Tuberculosis Chemotherapy Center in Madras, India. Established in 1956 in partnership with the Indian Council of Medical Research, the Madras state government, and the British Medical Research Council, the center’s first trial was a controlled experiment on the effectiveness of in-home treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis using chemotherapy and isoniazid, as compared to treatment in a sanatorium.Footnote 34 In the experiment, the center dispatched public health nurses to follow up on tuberculosis patients’ home care, including pill-taking and home quarantine. The experiment demonstrated that the group of patients who had received in-home treatment had the same rate of recovery as those treated in sanatoria. The results were published in the Bulletin of the World Health Organization, the foremost WHO publication on public health research.Footnote 35 However, when a subsequent trial in Madras suggested that drug resistance to isoniazid was pervasive, the Expert Committee on Tuberculosis showed great reluctance to take the new findings into account, fearing it would devalue isoniazid – and in so doing, in-home therapy. Eventually, without invalidating isoniazid, the technical report conservatively stated that “adequate information on the present prevalence of primary resistance is still not available,” downplaying the large quantity of data pointing to isoniazid resistance that had been collected through trials in Hong Kong, Ghana, South Africa, and other places.Footnote 36 Just as they had when promoting the BCG vaccine, WHO experts replaced unfavorable results with vague statements, such as there being a lack of proof as to the efficacy of isoniazid.
The examples of the GMEP and the tuberculosis control programs shed light on how statistical practices were implemented in the WHO’s epidemic control initiatives. Both examples show that WHO statisticians devised a circular system that connected fieldwork administration, research, and policy-making: statistical practices were to guide fieldwork, which would provide data for research and eventually inform the WHO’s policies. Under this system, however, WHO experts were still able to use their pre-existing knowledge on a given public health technology to select, invalidate, or interpret statistics collected from fieldwork. In both the GMEP and the tuberculosis control programs, WHO experts were able to decide which field statistics were reliable, and how to attribute the causes of unexpected quantified results. In this sense, WHO experts used statistics not only as a language to communicate the situation in the field, but also as a rhetorical instrument to reinforce their policy decisions. The way these experts selectively presented statistics (and commented on the lack of quantified proof for policies that were not supported by the numbers) also clearly demonstrates that statistics had an independent authority of their own, as experts were nonetheless obliged to cite – and make peace with – the numbers in their reports.
The Chishan Experiment: Tailoring GMEP Methods to Taiwanese Conditions
Geneva-based experts were not the only ones to contribute and analyze statistics for the WHO’s disease control programs. At the local level, ROC officials also played a role in the communication of field statistics to WHO headquarters.
The ROC’s inclusion in WHO disease control programs can be traced back to 1950. Between 1950 and 1951, shortly after the ROC central government had retreated to Taiwan, the government signed agreements with the WHO and UNICEF on a wide array of programs, including malaria and tuberculosis control.Footnote 37 In these agreements, the WHO stipulated that beneficiary countries must share their data with the organization for publication.Footnote 38 Under the framework of the agreements, the WHO sent consultants to Taiwan from time to time to monitor fieldwork, and Taiwanese public health workers were trained to take up statistical practices not only for fieldwork administration but also to provide data for public health research.
Public health officials in Taiwan, trained either in the Japanese medical system (during the colonial period) or at American-funded public health schools in China and the United States (during the interwar period), were already familiar with public health administration and research. For instance, Tao Rongjin (T’ao Jung-Chin), the director of the Taipei Tuberculosis Control Center, was trained at PUMC from 1938 to 1942, then worked as a technical expert on tuberculosis at the Central Field Health Station from 1943 to 1946 before being sent on a fellowship to the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health (JHSPH) in 1947.Footnote 39 The head of the malaria control program in Taiwan, Liang Guangqi (Liang Kuang-Ch’i, K. C. Liang), graduated from Taipei Imperial University in 1945 and worked as the acting vice-director of the Rockefeller-funded Taiwan Malaria Research Institute (TMRI) from 1946 to 1949; when the Rockefeller Foundation left Taiwan, Liang studied at the JHSPH on a Rockefeller-funded fellowship. Upon his return, he was promoted to director of the TMRI and was put in charge of research activities for the WHO’s malaria control programs in Taiwan.Footnote 40 In addition to Liang, sixty-four staff from the TMRI were trained by the Rockefeller Foundation from 1946 to 1949.Footnote 41 When the WHO began its epidemic control programs in collaboration with the ROC government, these local experts were trained in the WHO’s latest policies and methods of operation. They would go on to become key actors within the international system of fieldwork statistics.
The TMRI was put in charge of preparing to implement the WHO’s malaria control program. The first step was to establish the situation in the field. The TMRI staff first undertook malaria prevalence surveys and malariometric and entomological experiments to learn about malaria conditions on the island. In 1951, Liang prepared a blood smear census in collaboration with malaria control stations and health stations throughout the island.Footnote 42 On 17 December 1951, workers from malaria control stations visited elementary schools in their districts, sampling 100 schoolchildren between the ages of two and seven and collecting blood smears. All smears were sent to the TMRI to determine whether plasmodium was present. It was the ROC’s first island-wide investigation into the health status of the population in Taiwan. The results showed an average of 8.63 percent plasmodium in the blood smears. Based on the results of each village, the TMRI drew a malaria map of Taiwan, which would serve as the basis for the WHO’s design of its malaria control programs there.Footnote 43 From then on, every 17 December, all malaria control stations conducted a blood smear census to track changes in malaria prevalence rates.Footnote 44
Once the facts were established, it was time to determine the most suitable way to scale-up DDT spraying in the local conditions. In May 1952, the WHO sent E. A. Demos (a Greek malariologist), Donald J. Pletsch (an American entomologist), and P. S. Echavez (a Filipino sanitary engineer) to tackle the task.Footnote 45 The three experts set up malariometric and entomological experiments in Chishan, a township in Kaohsiung municipality, where they expected to derive benchmarks for subsequent DDT spraying.Footnote 46
Chishan thus became a laboratory for DDT spraying. Much like the Milbank health demonstration in New York (see Chapter 4), Chishan was selected based on statistical reasoning, given the presence of malaria there: the original candidate town, Chaojhou (where the TMRI was based), had too low a malaria prevalence rate to provide significant results.Footnote 47 The WHO and TMRI experts were more thorough than those from Milbank, however, in following controlled laboratory principles. They divided the township into three areas; these would undergo full, selective, and zero DDT spraying, respectively (see Figure 6.2).Footnote 48 In each area, TMRI technicians collected Anopheles mosquitoes every two weeks and conducted home visits to convince inhabitants to provide blood smears by informing them that parents who accepted the procedure being conducted on their babies under age one would receive milk powder donated by UNICEF.Footnote 49 All schoolchildren in Chishan were gathered every two weeks to undergo a spleen size check and blood smear sampling; those who were absent received visits from the TMRI staff.Footnote 50 Seven months later, the three WHO experts again went to Chishan to conduct a similar check. They discovered that spleen sizes were dropping in the selectively and fully sprayed areas; in fact, they had dropped the most in the area that had undergone selective spraying. However, despite proclaiming that the zero-DDT-spraying area served as the control group, the TMRI did not carry out a spleen size check or Anopheles sampling in that area. Moreover, because people living in the control area protested about being left out, in 1953 the TMRI implemented DDT spraying there as well. The Chishan experiment’s control area hence existed only for a short period in 1952.Footnote 51
As of 1952, the Chishan experiment was not statistically significant. All data collected were merely descriptive statistics without statistical hypothesis testing.Footnote 52 Although there was no clear explanation as to why the selective spraying area had experienced the largest drop in spleen size among schoolchildren, the experts nonetheless decided that the reduction of malaria-bearing Anopheles mosquitoes and the drop in spleen size in the fully and selectively sprayed areas constituted strong enough evidence to validate DDT spraying in Taiwan. The WHO and TMRI staff approved DDT spraying as the main malaria control measure within the Taiwan program, and in 1954, due to the early success in investigated areas, the goal was modified from merely controlling malaria to totally eradicating it.Footnote 53
An examination of the statistical practices used – and the decision to adopt DDT spraying – shows the distance that continued to separate statistics and policy-making, and the roles that experts played as intermediaries. Contrary to claims made at the beginning of the Chishan experiments, the results did not allow for a rigorous statistical test based on controlled laboratory principles. Possibly based on their general expertise and previous training, experts decided to approve DDT spraying in Taiwan despite the gaps in the quantified results. At the discursive level, quantification held considerable sway, and every report written by the WHO, the ROC government, and the United States aid agencies emphasized that the pre-operational survey in Chishan had played a salient role in determining the benchmark for the subsequent malaria control program.Footnote 54 In reality, the statistical practices used in the Chishan experiments resembled those used for the BCG vaccine: both reveal that experts had some leeway to select and interpret the numbers in such a way that they supported the WHO’s ongoing policies.
An Island-Wide Monitoring System, Based on Statistics
In addition to the Chishan experiments, Demos, Pletsch, and Echavez (the three WHO experts who had devised them) also collaborated with the TMRI to tailor the WHO’s preferred policy – the use of DDT for malaria control – into a set of quantified standards so that implementation would be thorough and consistent. Based on a sample population of two villages (amounting to ninety-seven households or 704 total inhabitants), the experts concluded that the average spraying surface per person was 52.6 m2,Footnote 55 that the ideal DDT concentration was 1.86 g/m2,Footnote 56 and that spraying should be carried out every year, as the housing materials did not absorb DDT.Footnote 57 A unit of seven workers could cover 356.71 m2 per hour.Footnote 58 The cost per capita was 2.35 New Taiwan Dollars (about $0.23), of which 63.54 percent was spent on the DDT, 20.81 percent on worker salaries, and 15.65 percent on other expenses.Footnote 59 The experts noted that these costs would be adjusted annually.Footnote 60
The TMRI established a roadmap for action in which it identified priority spraying areas through an island-wide spleen size survey, sampling 140,000 schoolchildren to determine the malaria prevalence in an area of 35,980 km2, almost the entire island.Footnote 61 The institute also organized short-term training programs for DDT sprayers to distribute the quantified standards. During training, the workers (mostly twenty- to thirty-year-old men recruited on a temporary basis), learned and practiced standardized techniques for DDT spraying, including how to install the sprayer, prepare the liquid, and hold the nozzle at the proper angle to the wall during spraying.Footnote 62 One worker still clearly recalled the standardized method more than forty years later:
The optimal concentration of DDT was 75 percent and every m2 had to be sprayed with 2 gm pure DDT. Based on this rule, we had to calculate how much DDT liquid should be prepared every minute, how much liquid should be sprayed every minute, and what the strength of the spray was, so that the DDT would not drip down on the wall. … With the DDT sprayers that we used, the sprinkler had to be kept at 80 degrees to the wall, at a distance of 45 cm from the wall.Footnote 63
The TMRI devised an island-wide network for malaria control that would be monitored using statistics. This monitoring system relied on more than 300 health centers dispersed throughout Taiwan.Footnote 64 Medical officers at the health centers were involved in collecting statistics in the field to be communicated to higher-level health authorities.Footnote 65 Health center workers and malaria detection teams toured rural areas conducting daily door-to-door surveys on fever cases and taking blood smears. Meanwhile, TMRI technicians collected mosquitoes to examine the overall malaria levels of the area.Footnote 66 Malaria prevalence studies and fieldwork were followed by laboratory examinations at the TMRI. Through blood smear exams and wall sample checks, the status of malaria in Taiwan was constantly under the microscope. The TMRI staff took samples from sprayed households (by cutting a 10 cm2 piece out of the wall) and sent them to the TMRI laboratory so it could determine if DDT spraying was in line with the benchmark.Footnote 67 The DDT spraying teams worked in a different part of the island and were required to submit a diary that included work hours, travel hours, working staff, number of villages, and beneficiary population numbers.Footnote 68
The circuit of information described above was maintained by individuals whose work was tightly controlled through a system of punishments and rewards. Private medical practitioners were encouraged to take blood smears from their patients, and for every blood smear that contained plasmodium, the practitioner received a bonus from the TMRI.Footnote 69 The TMRI laboratory workforce was also monitored using statistics. Every staff member was required to examine seventy blood smears per day, and to ensure the quality of the examinations, each smear was double-checked by a different staff member. For every smear incorrectly labeled as clean, the lab worker lost a third of his or her salary. Three mistakes would cost the worker a whole month’s pay.Footnote 70
This statistics-based system of punishments and rewards, though somewhat draconian, was presented by Taiwanese health experts in their reports to the WHO as an indicator of self-sufficiency and local participation: a sign of full collaboration with WHO policy. Pletsch, the leader of the WHO malaria and insect control team in Taiwan, was critical of statistics’ capacity to properly represent the passion and self-sufficiency of Taiwanese public health workers. As he wrote in a report to the WHO: “The co-operation, enthusiasm and diligence of the Malaria Institute and local health personnel have made possible extensive training and spraying operations which are expressed very inadequately by cold statistics.”Footnote 71 In fact, underlying the positive image evoked by Pletsch was the autocratic nature of the local regime. The period from 1947 to 1987 is known in Taiwan as the White Terror, a period in which the ROC government applied martial law and strict censorship. The public health surveillance system functioned similarly to the police in Taiwan at the time,Footnote 72 with public health nurses acting much like police officers, knocking on doors, following patients, and reporting them to research institutes. It is possible that this authoritarian atmosphere facilitated the implementation of the WHO’s programs, making Taiwan one of the rare places to successfully eradicate malaria through the GMEP.
Malaria control was not the only public health program that used a statistical system to administer fieldwork. The tuberculosis control program in Taiwan included a similar system to connect public health services at different levels. The Taipei Tuberculosis Control Center acted as the central organization of the WHO’s tuberculosis control program in Taiwan, the equivalent of the TMRI in the malaria control program. From this center, the statistical system was propagated to Taiwanese villages. As in the malaria control program, statistics were used to supervise progress on the ground and monitor the epidemiological situation. Specifically, the system comprised a large variety of tuberculosis detection organizations at different administrative levels, ranging from a specialized research and training institute (the Taipei Tuberculosis Control Center) to district chest clinics, health centers, health stations, and field units (such as mobile X-ray units).Footnote 73 In the field, statistics were collected directly by health service providers. Nurses in health centers were responsible for supervising medication, carrying out sputum and tuberculin testing, arranging X-ray exams, publicizing tuberculosis control methods, administering the BCG vaccine, and reporting the quantity of services provided to their district supervisors.Footnote 74 Every mobile X-ray unit had two clerks to record and report the number of X-ray tests and sputum checks to the Taipei Tuberculosis Control Center; any tuberculosis cases identified were to be reported for follow-up.Footnote 75 The Center had a statistical unit with one statistician, five clerks, and IBM machines for analyzing the numbers sent in by the nurses and X-ray units. The Center also organized training for five to seven statisticians each year to ensure statistical practices conducted in local organizations conformed to WHO standards.Footnote 76
In 1956, the ROC signed a supplementary agreement with the WHO. Stressing the importance of early detection and promoting in-home chemotherapy for tuberculosis patients, this agreement expanded the statistical system by increasing the number of local workers for detecting tuberculosis cases.Footnote 77 Tao Rongjin, the director of the Taipei Tuberculosis Control Center, also sought financial support from American aid agencies to hire non-professionals for tuberculosis control. Ambitiously, Tao contended that the Center was “going to examine half a million of people a year and more than 10,000 cases would be discovered.”Footnote 78 Taiwan’s tuberculosis control program gradually became a social program supervised by statistical data. The program’s workers had minimal medical training: all were unmarried women with a middle-school education. They were trained in social work and interviewing skills and put in charge of conducting “social control”: knocking on doors and persuading people to accept X-ray screening, handing over drugs to patients, calling patients for follow-up examinations, and collecting specimens for sputum tests.Footnote 79 Because all those conducting home visits were required to report on their daily services and meet their assigned benchmarks, numbers became the main focus of the tuberculosis reports.Footnote 80 The statistics collected were descriptive but very detailed in their depiction of the achievements of the program. In every report submitted to sponsors – including the WHO, UNICEF, and American aid agencies – numbers on tuberculin tests, X-rays, and BCG vaccinations were presented again and again.Footnote 81
This single-minded focus on statistical data was not without repercussions. As Wendy Espeland and Michael Sauder’s research on quantification has shown, a focus solely on the numbers created a “selective accountability” in that dimensions that were quantified and recorded were taken into account, while other aspects tended to be overlooked.Footnote 82 The final mission report of Alan Penington, the WHO’s senior adviser on tuberculosis, provides a lucid account of this phenomenon: “The performance of a large number of X-ray examinations may appear impressive, but has little significance unless all suspect cases found are adequately followed and brought under study.”Footnote 83 He concluded: “There is a very real danger of seeking the accumulation of figures which are not genuinely significant.”Footnote 84 In expressing his concerns about the limits of statistics, Penington underscored the importance of following up on patients’ conditions after massive case-finding. However, his reflections had no influence on later projects and reports, in which statistical data remained central. For example, in its five-year plan for the tuberculosis control program, the Taiwan provincial health administration again contented itself with listing numbers that showed the efforts they had made in hunting down tuberculosis cases in every corner of the island.Footnote 85
In its efforts to fight both malaria and tuberculosis in Taiwan, the WHO worked with local health organizations to construct statistical surveillance systems aimed at ensuring that the standards used to control the diseases were correctly implemented throughout the island. Actors at different levels were connected by statistical systems. From quantified DDT spraying efforts to benchmarks for fieldworkers, numbers allowed experts to govern from a distance, even though those experts were aware of the negative impact of this reliance on numbers.
Present, Convince, Support: From Local Statistics to Global Knowledge
The administration of local fieldwork was not the only reason statistical practices were integrated into public health programs. In fact, at the outset of every field research project, public health experts such as Liang and Tao envisaged their fieldwork as contributing to the overall scientific understanding of a given public health measure. Liang’s opening address at a training session for DDT sprayers, for instance, shows that he equated fieldwork with experimentation; this was reminiscent of his interwar predecessors, who considered health demonstrations to be laboratories of a sort (see Chapter 4). Encouraging field workers to report statistics honestly, Liang stated:
The experiment cannot be faked; fake numbers cannot produce good experiment results. We should always be honest. … Medical science cannot be faked, once you have faked, everything will become fake.Footnote 86
After compiling statistics from fieldwork, ROC experts working at each program’s headquarters (the TMRI and the Taipei Tuberculosis Control Center, respectively) published their statistical “findings” (sometimes a mere compilation of field reports) in scientific journals. Liang himself also presented data collected in the field to the WHO Expert Committee on Malaria.Footnote 87 Through such efforts, public health programs in Taiwan became scientific experiments that served as models, or references, for similar programs across the world.
By showcasing the programs in Taiwan, public health experts promoted their know-how, which also made them fitting candidates for implementing analogous programs. It is significant that, once the Taiwan programs were fully established, the experts who devised them were recruited by the WHO to design similar programs in other countries.Footnote 88 Liang and Tao, for example, who had published their results in academic journals and/or participated in WHO expert committee meetings, were both recruited in this manner. Tao became the tuberculosis expert at the WHO’s Western Pacific Regional Office in 1959 and was sent by the organization to mainland China in the 1980s. Liang, on the other hand, was recruited by the Pan American Health Organization in 1957 and worked there until his retirement in 1981. TMRI expert Chen Wanyi (Ch’en Wan-I) also ended up working for the Pan American Health Organization for twelve years; Chen Xixuan (Ch’en Hsi-Hsuan) worked for the WHO for twenty, traveling from Vietnam to the Solomon Islands devising malaria control programs.Footnote 89 A total of twenty-nine other Taiwanese nationals were also recruited by the WHO between 1949 and 1971. All except Fang Yiji (I. C. Fang) – who became the director of the Western Pacific Regional Office – were recruited as experts in a specialized field, such as malaria, tuberculosis control, and public health administration.Footnote 90
To shed light on these experts’ publication of statistics collected in the field, I conducted research on PubMed, a leading database comprising more than 26 million citations for biomedical literature, and searched for articles authored by Liang and Tao, the two key experts who worked on malaria and tuberculosis, respectively.Footnote 91 There are eight articles by Liang (the director of the TMRI until 1957) in the database.Footnote 92 They can be broadly categorized into two groups: those that focus on demonstrating the behavioral patterns of Anopheles mosquitoes in Taiwan, which were published in the Journal of Indian Malariology, in collaboration with Robert Watson of the Rockefeller Foundation and Pletsch of the WHO; and those that recount the malaria control program in Taiwan, which were published in WHO’s Bulletin and Chronicle. Tao, for his part, is the author of nine articles in the database. The earliest set of articles presents facts collected during Taiwanese tuberculosis control fieldwork, including vital statistics, prevalence rates, and death rates among tuberculosis patients;Footnote 93 a later set, published in the 1970s, frame Taiwan’s tuberculosis control program as a success owing to its low costs.Footnote 94 Though there is some divergence in Liang and Tao’s publications, partially due to the different epidemiological patterns of malaria and tuberculosis, both used statistics to present their programs to the scientific community. Both had been trained at the JHSPH,Footnote 95 and thus it was highly possible that they had a positive view of public health technologies and statistical practices that they shared with their counterparts in Geneva. Liang and Tao did not only use statistics to increase the visibility of their programs: through analysis, they also presented their fieldwork as meaningful case studies of the WHO’s disease control policies. By imposing the grammar of statistics, they made public health fieldwork in Taiwan legible to other public health researchers.
Beneath the general picture presented by their publications, what strategies did Taiwanese public health experts employ when using field statistics to feed into foreign organizations’ policy-making process? I identified three types of argumentation used by Taiwanese experts: i) presenting quantified facts and making policy suggestions to the scientific community; ii) presenting Taiwan as a potential case study for new measures; and iii) providing facts relevant to the WHO’s concerns under the framework of its ongoing policies.
The first category involved using statistics simply to present quantified facts and make policy suggestions. Most of the publications reviewed above fall into this category. Tao’s article in American Review of Respiratory Disease provides an evocative example. In the twelve-page article, Tao used a total of fifteen graphs and tables to portray the decreasing trend in tuberculosis cases in Taiwan.Footnote 96 He did not make any argument based on the graphs, as the statistics were purely descriptive – there was no statistical hypothesis testing. In the final section, entitled “Discussion,” Tao merely suggested that the main contribution of the tuberculosis control program in Taiwan was to give rise to “cultural change.” He argued that, thanks to the program, Taiwanese people no longer considered tuberculosis an incurable disease affecting only the rich. Tellingly, Tao’s argument was completely dissociated from the statistical facts to which he had devoted several pages. Despite the lack of a real argument, Tao’s article nonetheless established solid facts regarding the program in Taiwan, and because it was published in a renowned scientific journal, it was considered as an important point of reference on tuberculosis control there.
The second type of argumentation adopted by the Taiwanese experts was to use quantified survey methods to present the island as a case study for new measures supported by foreign organizations. In doing so, the experts influenced policy-making by introducing the latest and most advanced public health measures to the island, a possibility they relished. This finding contradicts historians’ typical discourse on the implementation of public health programs in Taiwan. While most historians note that Taiwan rolled out in-home therapy only a year after the Madras domiciliary therapy experiment, despite no statistical proof that it was effective, this is generally considered an indicator of WHO experts’ careless attitude toward their programs’ benefit to countries.Footnote 97 The archival records show otherwise, however. In fact, it was Tao who sought to implement in-home therapy in Taiwan and brokered the arrangement with the foreign organizations involved. To potential sponsors, he presented Taiwan’s tuberculosis prevalence rate as a reason the island would make an ideal case study for testing the effectiveness of in-home therapy. In 1956, during a stay in the United States, Tao gave a presentation on tuberculosis prevalence in Taiwan to Carroll Palmer, the tuberculosis expert at the United States Public Health Service and a consultant to the WHO on tuberculosis control. In his presentation, Tao argued that the high prevalence rate in Taiwan would make it a strong example for validating the effect of isoniazid in outpatient treatment regimens.Footnote 98 With Palmer’s support, Tao developed a sampling plan for evaluating the prophylactic use of isoniazid for outpatient treatment, using high-school students in Taiwan as test subjects.Footnote 99 Guo Songgen (Quo Sung-Ken), by that time a statistician at the WHO’s Western Pacific Regional Office, also visited Taiwan to review the sampling procedure and establish a tuberculosis registry center within the Taipei Tuberculosis Control Center.Footnote 100 Tao’s strategy – presenting Taiwan as an ideal case study for testing isoniazid – successfully attracted additional financial support from the WHO and the United States government.
The third category of argumentation used in published articles involved providing facts that supported the WHO’s ongoing policies. One significant instance was a research document entitled “Economic and Social Effects of Malaria Control with Some Specific Instances From Taiwan,” submitted by Pletsch and Chen Zhengde (Ch’en Cheng Te, commonly known as C. T. Ch’en) to the WHO Expert Committee on Malaria in 1956.Footnote 101 At the time, the WHO had just endorsed the GMEP based on the idea that eradicating malaria would help to conserve the workforce in tropical countries.Footnote 102 Aiming to test the validity of this notion, Pletsch and Chen Zhengde presented statistics on the loss of working days and calculated the total loss of salary during a malaria epidemic in Kaoshu, a town in southern Taiwan. In the conclusion, they nonetheless reported that the malaria epidemic had actually created jobs for people living in neighboring villages, meaning that the epidemic was partially beneficial to the local economy. Faced with two conflicting results, the duo chose to stand with the WHO by stating that Taiwan was, after all, “overpopulated”.Footnote 103 This case provides a revealing example of how experts used statistics within the framework of WHO policy: Pletsch and Chen conducted a statistical survey based on WHO policy statements, and despite the fact that their data contradicted the WHO’s official position (that malaria epidemics undermined the economy), they nonetheless expressed support for the existing policy in their core argument, even discarding some important findings from their survey. During the 1950s, Pletsch and Chen’s investigation was never included in mainstream discourse. A progress report submitted to United States aid agencies again repeated the prevailing discourse about malaria causing a loss of manpower and working hours, writing that:
Until recent years, one of the most serious obstacles to economic progress in Taiwan was the loss of time caused by malaria. … The avoidance of lost time due to illness on farms and in factories by the reduction of upwards of ninety nine percent in cases represents both a vast increase in productivity and a stupendous reduction in human suffering and poverty.Footnote 104
It was not until the 1960s, when economic development policy peaked within the United Nations, that experts openly argued that malaria control programs had had only a limited impact on developing countries’ economies.Footnote 105
Although experts in Taiwan packaged their field numbers for the global stage, the above three types of argumentation showcase how experts and the statistics they collected had a limited impact on mainstream global health policy. Taiwanese experts’ curation of numbers influenced policy only when they made Taiwanese fieldwork appear to uphold existing policies, which they then introduced to the island.
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When we juxtapose the WHO’s statistical system for disease control with that of its interwar predecessors, it is clear that numbers became more pervasive in public health experts’ arguments and policy-making practices. In both Geneva and Taiwan, experts could not do as their interwar counterparts had done and simply denounce the unreliability of the existing statistics. Nor were they completely free to decide whether to cite statistics in their policy advocacy or the extent to which statistics from the field could be translated into policies (see Chapter 4). If the results of vaccine trials and pilot programs did not validate programs designed at the WHO’s headquarters, experts instead used their public health knowledge to criticize the representativeness of the results.
In both Geneva and Taiwan, officers’ statistical practices tended to support the WHO’s ongoing policies despite failing to obtain positive quantified results from fieldwork. Still, their aims were conspicuously different, as the two groups were situated at different levels of the global health policy-making hierarchy: WHO experts aimed to produce evidence that supported the organization’s ongoing general policy, whereas Taiwanese experts’ priority was to secure resources from Geneva by presenting Taiwan as an eligible testing ground for WHO policies. Taiwanese experts therefore based the type of field observations they made – and the type of numbers they reported – on the WHO’s policy advocacy statements. At the policy-making level, however, on-the-ground observations that went against WHO policy had little power to alter the policy in question. In this sense, the contention that public health technologies were validated by field experiments before being massively implemented in Taiwan and the rest of the world should not be taken entirely at face value. Although Taiwanese experts were clearly limited in their power to influence international health policy, they still became authorities thanks to their experiences in Taiwan, and many were recruited by the WHO to contribute to similar programs in other regions. Some went on to work for the WHO until their retirement.
Although statistics drew a sometimes unflattering picture of the WHO’s technology-centered programs, it was not until the Alma-Ata Declaration of 1978 – in which the WHO’s member states urged the organization to adopt a strategy on primary health care – that belief in technology-centered solutions began to wane, before being reignited by the eradication of smallpox in the 1980s.Footnote 106
It should also be noted that the WHO’s statistical system was not omnipresent throughout the world. The next chapter will focus on another group of statisticians, working in the People’s Republic of China, who were disassociated from the WHO’s epidemiological reporting system and instead based their statistical methods on the socialist model.