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The Robert Koch Institute: one of the world’s oldest biomedical institutes

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First headquarters of the Royal Prussian Institute for Infectious Diseases in Schumannstraße in Berlin-Mitte, end of the 19th century. Source:  RKI First headquarters of the Royal Prussian Institute for Infectious Diseases in Schumannstraße in Berlin-Mitte, end of the 19th century. Source: RKI

2021 RKI gets its own Centre for Artificial Intelligence in Public Health Research located in Wildau.
2020 During the COVID-19 pandemic, RKI provides extensive situation assessments and recommendations.
2019 RKI gets its own Centre for International Health Protection.
2017 The strategy ‘RKI 2025’ envisages extending digital epidemiology, connecting public health stakeholders and taking on greater responsibility at international level.
2016 The institute celebrates its 125th anniversary. Over 1,100 people with 90 different occupations are employed at the four sites in Berlin and Wernigerode, including 450 scientists.
2015 A new office and laboratory building is inaugurated at the Seestrasse site, including a laboratory with the highest safety level (BSL4).
2014 In West Africa, 50 members of RKI’s staff help to contain the largest Ebola Virus Disease outbreak in history.
2008 The Bundestag decides to develop RKI into a modern public health institute (‘RKI 2010’). Staffing numbers are increased.
2007 RKI is officially charged with health monitoring. The institute thus continuously collects data on disease incidence and risk behaviour amongst all age groups of the population in Germany.
2006 Jointly with the Federal Statistical Office, RKI is commissioned to conduct health reporting in Germany.
2003 RKI introduces the KiGGS Study: for the first time, comprehensive data on the health status of children and young people are collected nationwide.
2002 The institute acquires an additional site in Berlin-Wedding: Seestrasse.
2001 RKI becomes the central point in Germany for recognising and addressing bioterrorist risk situations.
2001 The Infection Protection Act (Infektionsschutzgesetz, IfSG) enters into force. The registering and control of infectious diseases are fundamentally modernised, RKI’s responsibilities are extended.
1998 RKI conducts its first comprehensive study on the state of health and health behaviour of adults in Germany.
1994 The Federal Health Office is dissolved. RKI merges with the AIDS Centre, which had been founded in 1988, and the Institute for Social Medicine and Epidemiology (SozEp) in Berlin-Tempelhof – the latter specialising in non-communicable diseases.
1990 After German reunification, various GDR authorities are integrated into RKI, including part of the Central Institute for Hygiene, Microbiology and Epidemiology in Berlin-Schöneweide and the Institute for Experimental Epidemiology in Wernigerode in the Harz region. The Wernigerode site is still a branch of RKI.
1982 When the first cases of AIDS occur in Germany RKI establishes an AIDS register.
1978 A new laboratory building is inaugurated on the Nordufer, one of the most modern in Europe at the time.
1960 The institute starts producing the only yellow fever vaccine licensed by the WHO in Germany. Production continues until 2002.
1952 RKI becomes part of the newly-founded Federal Health Office. The building on the Nordufer is extended, laboratories and stables are modernised.
1945 Parts of the institute have been destroyed during the war. With the help of the Allies, work is resumed.
1942 The institute becomes an independent Reich institute called the Robert Koch Institute. It now focuses on research into infectious diseases that threaten military striking power.
1933 After the National Socialist takeover, Jewish scientists are forced to leave the institute. During the Third Reich, RKI is heavily involved in National Socialist strong-arm tactics. Leading scientists play a role, amongst others, in human experimentation in sanatoria and concentration camps.
1912 On the 30th anniversary of the discovery of the tuberculosis bacterium the institute is re-named “Royal Prussian Institute for Infectious Diseases, ‘Robert Koch’”.
1910 Robert Koch dies and is laid to rest in a mausoleum inside the institute.
1906/07 Robert Koch and colleagues investigate sleeping sickness in German East Africa. Their drug tests result in blindness in many patients, some even die.
1905 Robert Koch is awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine.
1900 Relocation to a new building on the Nordufer in Berlin-Wedding, which remains RKI headquarters to this day.
1891 On 1 July, the “Royal Prussian Institute for Infectious Diseases” takes up its work – in a converted residential building in Schumannstraße in Berlin-Mitte. Robert Koch heads the institute until 1904.

Date: 31.07.2023