History of Infectious Disease Pandemics in Urban Societies
- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2015
Summary
Beginning in the mid-19th century tremendous gains were made in the historical struggle with infectious diseases. The emergence of modern medicine and epidemiology, and the establishment of public health measures, helped urban populations overcome a historical death penalty. The conquest of infectious disease has created a human hubris. It is a collective self-delusion that infectious diseases, once exposed to the light of modern medicine, science, and public health would inevitably become eradicated.
When these advances began in the mid-19th century the world’s population was under two billion, mostly non-urbanized. At the dawn of the 21st century the world’s population already surpassed seven billion. The world’s once far flung urban populations have exponentially expanded in number, size, and connectivity.
Infectious diseases have long benefited from the concentration of human population and their opportunistic abilities to take advantage of their interconnectedness. The struggle between humans and infectious diseases is one in which there is a waxing and waning advantage of one over the other. Human hubris has been challenged since the late 1970s with the prospect that infectious diseases are not eradicated. Concerns have increased since the latter third of the twentieth century that infectious diseases are gaining a new foothold. As pandemics from AIDS to Ebola have increased in frequency, there has also developed a sense that a global pandemic of a much greater magnitude is likely to happen. Tracing the historical record, this book examines the manners in which population concentrations have long been associated with the spread of pandemic disease. It also examines the struggle between human attempts to contain infectious diseases, and the microbial struggle to contain human population advancement.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2015
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-7391-8026-6
- ISBN-Online
- 978-0-7391-8027-3
- Publisher
- Lexington, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 247
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Prologue No access
- 1 The Past No access Pages 1 - 24
- 2 Origins of the Urban Death Penalty No access Pages 25 - 46
- 3 The First Rural-Urban Turnaround No access Pages 47 - 66
- 4 Infectious Diseases and Medical Traditions in the Levant No access Pages 67 - 100
- 5 Emergence of the Enlightenment No access Pages 101 - 126
- 6 Advancement of Science and Medicine No access Pages 127 - 154
- 7 Inoculation and Infectious Disease No access Pages 155 - 182
- 8 A Review of the Urban Death Penalty No access Pages 183 - 210
- 9 Postlogue No access Pages 211 - 234
- Bibliography No access Pages 235 - 242
- Index No access Pages 243 - 246
- About the Author No access Pages 247 - 247





