Portugal The
Hospital-Colónia Rovisco Pais (the Rovisco Pais Hospital–Colony) was founded in Portugal in 1947 as a national center for the treatment of leprosy. It was renamed in 2007 as the Centro de Medicina de Reabilitação da Região Centro-Rovisco Pais. It still retains a leprosy service in which 25 ex patients live. Between 1988 and 2003 102 patients were treated in Portugal for leprosy.
Spain The
Sanatorio de Fontilles (Fontilles Sanatorium) in Spain was founded in 1902 and admitted its first patient in 1909. In 2002, the Sanatorio had 68 in-patients in the Sanatorium, and more than 150 receiving out-patient treatment. A small number of cases continue to be reported.
Greece Two indigenous cases were reported from Greece in 2009.
France One case was reported in France in 2009
Germany Leprosy was almost eradicated in most of Europe by 1700 but sometime after 1850 leprosy was re introduced into East
Prussia by
Lithuanian rural workers immigrating from the Russian empire. The first leprosarium was founded in 1899 in Memel (now
Klaipėda in Lithuania). Legislation was introduced in 1900 and 1904 requiring patients to be isolated and not allowed to work with others.
United Kingdom The last confirmed case of Leprosy being transmitted within the UK was in 1953. Between 2003 & 2012, an average of 139 cases/year of leprosy were diagnosed (and notified) in the UK, none of which are believed to have been acquired within the UK.
Malta The first documented case of leprosy (
erga corpore morbi leprae) in Malta in a Gozitan woman (Garita Xejbais) was in 1492 but it is certain that it was present on the island before this time. The next recorded case was in 1630 in a Dominican friar. A report in 1687 recorded five cases. A further three cases were reported in 1808. Between 1839 and 1858 an additional seven cases were recorded. In 1890, a population survey recorded a total of 69 cases. A later survey in 1957 identified 151 people infected with leprosy. In June 1972, an eradication programme was started. The project was based on the work of Enno Freerksen, Director of the Borsal Institute in
Hamburg. Dr Freerksen's earlier trial had used
rifampicin,
izoniazid,
dapsone and
prothionamide. The Malta project used rifampicin, dapsone and clofamazine. The project formally concluded in 1999 having treated about 300 patients.
Romania The last leper colony in Europe is at
Tichileşti, Romania. Until 1991, patients were not allowed to leave the colony. At this colony patients get food, a place to sleep, clothes and medical attention. Some live in long pavilions and others in houses with vegetable and flower gardens. There are two churches in the colony –
Orthodox and
Baptist – and a farm where the colony grows its own corn. ==North America==