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What contributed to the need for better sanitation practices?
Population increase in Britain
Who argued in a famous report that the British government would save
money by abandoning laissez-faire and investing in sanitation?
Chadwick
what was the centuries-long process by which land was transferred from the Church and from communities to private individuals, contributing to the population increase in Britain in the 1800s/shift in the agricultural productivity, land ownership, landscape, roads, class divisions, etc.?
Enclosure
"the Saint" who worked to abolish the slave trade, improve working conditions, abolish vivisections
Wilberforce
what happened in Ireland in the 1840s-1850s that caused population decrease?
Irish Potato Famine
what caused Irish Potato Famine?
Phytophthora infestans
what made conditions miserable for the working class, creating houses for the poor to do grueling, meaningless work?
New Poor Law of 1834
who wrote "An Essay on Population" and believed in "free market" ideology such as laissez faire, that as populations grow exponentially and surpass the available resources, natural mechanisms like famine, disease, and war would "check" population growth?
Malthus
who believed that government programs that provided assistance to the poor would encourage more births?
Malthus
used statistics, believed poverty caused disease, disease caused poverty
Sanitarians
famous Sanitarian
Chadwick
"all smell is, if it be intense, immediate acute disease"
miasmatism
the idea that something is out there that causes specific disease/pathologies
not just imbalance of humors anymore but not yet germ theory
disease specificity
founder of modern nursing, accomplished a lot in the Crimean War, founded pavillion wards to avoid transmission of infections
florence nightingale
origins of cholera
Ganges Delta in India
when did cholera spread globally
early 19th century
what is cholera caused by
Vibrio cholerae bacteria
who was first to discover bacterium that causes cholera by looking at it under microscope?
Pacini
symptoms of cholera
diarrhea described as "rice water", dehydration, cramps, flesh shrinks and darkens, rapid course- death in one day
what was happening in London in the 1840s
cesspools were created that collected human waste and cleaned by "night soil men" every 6 months, eventually turned "the Thames into a great cesspool instead of each person having one of his own"
what caused spread of cholera globally?
british colonization of India + commerce
how is cholera transmitted?
contaminated water + food
English civil engineer that created sewage system that helped wipe out cholera
Bazalgette
"spreads at exactly the rate people travel" aka was spread by something to do with contact between people (implying not miasma, not in the soil)
cholera
theory that cholera and other diseases was spread by contaminated soil + groundwater
telluric theory of disease
first figured out how cholera was spread by mapping its incidence relative to the Broad Street Pump
John Snow
what was the pump that John Snow used to figure out the spread of cholera
Broad Street Pump
what method did Snow invent to trace cholera outbreaks that is integral to epidemiology?
contact tracing
what was the event where the fumes from the hot weather and the Thames became too much to bear?
Great Stink
good statistician that read Snow's original work, didn't agree, but added the question to census "Where does your water come from?"
William Farr
500 residents of Golden Square die in five days in September 1854•
A population in same space, same elevation, same air with two different water supplies
Outbreak of 1854
water company in Outbreak of 1854 that was doing fine and was upstream of sewage
Lambeth
water company in Outbreak of 1854 that was not doing fine and was downstream of sewage
Vauxhall
how did people account for anomalies with the cholera outbreak?
people near the pump who didn't get sick worked in brewery so they just drank beer, people who were in workhouse didn't get sick bc they didn't get their water from the pump
discovered the importance of handwashing which was foundational for germ theory (not quite there yet), by using statistics, looking at medical students vs midwives with child delivery and puerperal fever before the discovery of germs
his mentor died after doing autopsy and got a laceration
Semmelweis
what school did Semmelweis conduct his research at?
Vienna Medical School / Vienna General Hospital
what was occurring in Germany at the time of Semmelweis?
"history reached its turning point and failed to turn" in 1848
why did the deaths of mothers after birth appear seasonal?
most deaths upon arrival of new medical students
origins of germ theory
miasma, contagion (plague, syphilis, smallpox), leeuwenhoek's animalcules
who solved chromatic aberration in 1826 and used staining to help people see the bacteria that not everyone could see?
Lister
who discovered that yeast was alive?
Schwann
who didn't trust Schwann's findings and ridiculed him?
Liebig
what did Liebig say?
chemicals cause putrefaction and fermentation instead of living organisms
name of Liebig's ridicule
"The Riddle of Vinous Fementation SOlved" 1839
chemistry professor that confirms Schwann
disproves spontaneous generation
vaccines to prevent displacement of disease
Pasteur
realizes heat kills harmful bacteria to prevent spoilage by heating up wine to help winemakers of Burgundy
Pasteurization
what disease did Pasteur eradicate in silkworms?
pebrine
first laboratory-developed vaccine by Pasteur
chicken cholera vaccine
what other vaccines did Pasteur invent?
anthrax and rabies
identified lots of different bacteria
haven't discovered viruses yet
figures out problem with anthrax, realizing that anthrax has a confusing life cycel
discovers bacterium produces a spore that is dangerous
rediscovers bacterium that causes tuberculosis and cholera
isolates and identifies germs of wound infections
develops agar to culture things
Koch
Quaker that believed in serving humanity, not frivolous, believed in hard work, heavily involved in intellectual pursuits
associated with the doctrine of The Antiseptic System
Lister
Koch's 1st postulate
The microorganism must be found in abundance in all organisms suffering from the disease, but should not be found in healthy organisms.
applies antiseptic for wounds and started correspondence with Pasteur
antisepsis (carbolic acid-corrosive), sprayed everywhere, caused damage to instruments, lungs, and wounds
Listerism
what disease had a historical impact on the decline of rome, the independence of america, and the lazy south?
malaria
deadliest parasite of malaria (more recently evolved)
Caused some African to evolve sickle cell hemoglobin, very high mortality rate, sickle cell is still super common even though it can also be deadly which shows how much more deadly malaria is
Plasmodium falciparum
most common parasite of malaria with low mortality rate
plasmodium vivax
zoonotic parasite of malaria from macaques
plasmodium knowlesi
parasite of malaria that evolved ability to "winter" in the liver
plasmodium vivax
preferred more developed areas
do not tolerate cold
liked to get food from people rather than animals
anopheles gambiae
discovered the malaria parasite
Laveran
Laveran's theory after he saw lesions in the victims (mosquito bites)
mosquito hypothesis
showed that mosquitos were spreading disease in 1878, elephantitis (thought mosquitos were getting disease from swamp water)
Patrick Manson
saw parasites in mosquitos and used them to infect birds
Ronald Ross
produced malaria in humans, elucidated the cycle of transmission and chemotherapy
Giovanni Grassi
solutions for malaria: medicine
quinine, chloroquine, arte misinin (alkaloids)
problems are adherence to protocol and resistance
solutions for malaria: insecticide
DDT - used in WWII, Silent Spring by Rachel Carson revealed deadliness
American epidemiologist, part of Rockefeller Foundation, directed program that eradicated malaria vector from Brazil using insecticide
Fred Soper
solutions for malaria: vaccine
compliance, resistance, problems with vaccine
why did malaria continue in global south?
Dry farming of wheat vs. rice, corn, etc.
urbanization vs. planatation agriculture
livestock vs. absence of livestock
drainage and improvements vs. sharecropping
Koch's 2nd postulate
The microorganism must be isolated from a diseased organism and grown in pure culture.
Koch's 3rd postulate
The cultured microorganism should cause disease when introduced into a healthy organism.
Koch's 4th postulate
The microorganism must be re-isolated from the inoculated, diseased experimental host and identified as being identical to the original specific causative agent.
what suppresses symptoms of malaria?
sickle cell anemia, they still carry parasite but have partial immunity to falciparum
vector of yellow fever
Aedes aegypti
incubation period of malaria
7-30 days
incubation period of yellow fever
3-6 days
symptoms of yellow fever
high fever, black vomitus, jaundice
mortality rate of yellow fever
50%
cause of yellow fever
virus
immunity from yellow fever?
lifetime immunity after you get it
discovered diagnostic symptom of yellow fever
Faget
treatment of yellow fever
supportive care, no treatment
who came up with the yellow fever vaccine
Max Theiler
How did yellow fever contribute to the Americas gaining their independence?
Yellow fever is endemic to Cuba so people were less susceptible to the disease. However the Spanish soldiers fighting them weren't and died in high numbers, allow Cuba to gain independence
realized characteristic lesion in capillaries, conducted 100 experiements published in leading journals but was ignored
Carlos Finlay
what did Finlay prove?
Mosquitoes transmit yellow fever, a bite can produce immunity, immunity is not distributed by race, controlling mosquitoes is bees prevention.
why was Finlay ignored?
combination of scientific, political, and personal issues. For one, he wasn't in bacteriology(usually the field people who discovered diseases were in), the case of yellow fever he produces weren't severe enough to conclude yellow fever, he experimented in Havana and some people thought that it was in the air so he should have experimented elsewhere, Sternberg ignored his work and he has his own theory so he discredits Finlay, he also wasn't American so people thought he couldn't be that smart, he was also weird, also Cubans didn't benefit from this discovery
Ignored Finlay's work, had his own theory and believed it was a fecal disease, found his own yellow fever bacterium
Sternberg
produced 3 cases in August 1900 using Finlay's birds, one case was his own
Lazear
resisted Finlay, but Lazear's death convinces him to test Finlay's theory, included incubation period
Walter Reed
Reed's experiments
One building had no mosquitoes but filled it with fomites(blood and black vomit) and made people living in there sleep on the thing things. Nobody got sick. The second building had no fomites but lost of mosquitoes carrying yellow fever and the people living there also get sick. Since they knew that some people might die, they created consent forms for the people to do the experiment(and they bribed them).
noticed 12 days required of incubation period (theory of extrinsic incubation)
Henry Rose Carter
what disproves extrinsic incubation?
Incubation depends on temperature and humidity, and can be spread in one day in the right circumstances
what did Henry Rose Carter come up with that Walter Reed believed?
extrinsic incubation
how did yellow fever change public health?
Created national board of public health in US and started the idea of consent forms for experiments involving humans
contributed greatly to mosquito control to prevent yellow fever in Cuba and Panama
Gorgas