Gustavo Pittaluga (doctor)
Gustavo Pittaluga Fattorini (1876 in Florence, Italy – 1956 in Havana, Cuba) was an Italian doctor and biologist. Nationalized Spanish in 1904 Pittaluga made contributions to the development of haematology and the parasitology, as well as by his contributions to national and international fight against malaria and other protozoans causing diseases. Pittaluga studied medicine in the University of Rome, where he became a doctor in 1900 with a thesis on acromegaly. Although he had become interested in psychiatry, a subject in which he never lost the interest, he became the assistant of the doctor and naturalist Giovanni Battista Grassi, a specialist in the zoology of invertebrates and protozoans. Grassi was the one of the team (including Pittaluga) who demonstrated that malaria is transmitted by mosquitoes of the genus Anopheles.[1]
References
- Nicholas Coni - Medicine and Warfare: Spain, 1936–1939 - 1134170696 2013 Page 29 "One of the leading protagonists of this initiative was Professor Gustavo Pittaluga Fattorini (see chaps. 5 and 12), director of the Escuela Nacional de Sanidad, who was anxious to solicit the participation of the Rockefeller Foundation"