Theodor Bilharz
Research Institute
Theodor Bilharz Research Institute
(TBRI) is a governmental medical research institution named
after the German scientist Maximillian Theodor Bilharz who
discovered, in autopsy material at Kasr El Aini hospital, the
causative agent of haematuria: Schistosoma worm, during his work
in Egypt in 1851.
The idea of initiating the
institute was elaborated in 1960 via high council of science,
owing to the magnitude of schistosomiasis problem in Egypt
specially in the rural population and its impact on the
socioeconomic life.
The objective of the institute was to tackle this diseases from
all its aspects: control, diagnosis and management.
In 1960, Prof Dr. Ahmed Hafez Mousa ,the real originator of the
institute and one of the world's pioneers in the field of
Tropical Medicine was charged to fulfill this idea. He appointed
the Tropical Medicine Department at Kasr El Aini, Faculty of
Medicine a preliminary location for a small nuclear start of
this project. This was followed by the establishment of a
"Laboratory for Schisosomiasis Research" in the Chemistry
building of the National Research Center.
In April 1962, the foundation
stone of the institute was implemented at Warak El Hader's
village in Giza governorate. Meanwhile, the building of the
institute was constructed by Egyptian Government, the
laboratories and hospital were equipped through an agreement
between the governments of Federal Republic of Germany and Egypt
in 1964. In the same year, the institute was officially
affiliated to the Ministry of Scientific Research. By June 1978
the TBRI's laboratories and out-patients' clinics were
inaugurated. The attached hospital was completed in December
1981, and the official opening was in 1983.
For more information, visit the
official website of the institute at
http://www.tbri.sci.eg/