Page 193 - Berkshire Encyclopedia Of World History Vol Two
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542 berkshire encyclopedia of world history



                                                                   Let nothing which can be treated by diet be treated by
                                                                        other means. • Maimonides (1135–1204)





            garbage, food storage, and human feces. Fecal-oral dis-  transatlantic shipping doomed approximately 90 percent
            eases, particularly severe ones, thrive best in cities. For  of the Native American population shortly after the ar-
            example, cholera, producing diarrhea so violent that it  rival of Europeans.
            can lead to death by dehydration, is primarily an urban
            disease caused by people drinking water in which other  New and Greater Risks
            people have defecated. Tuberculosis, an occasional dis-  Twentieth-century antibiotics have provided cures for a
            ease in a small population, is a major threat in cities. Stor-  number of once-dangerous scourges such as bubonic
            age can bring rats in numbers. Bubonic plague, once an  plague and tuberculosis. And vaccinations that produce
            occasional disease in the wild, became an urban scourge  lasting immunity have protected individuals against many
            when cities attracted large populations of rats.    viral infections such as measles and smallpox. But
                                                                microorganisms are evolving faster than scientists are
            Transport and Trade                                 inventing new preventions or cures. Potentially lethal
            Perhaps most important, large cities and widespread  strains of tuberculosis and Staphylococcus bacteria that
            transport permitted the spread of epidemic diseases.  no antibiotic can destroy have already developed.
            Although most probably originated as zoonoses from    Air travel has enormously increased the risk that infec-
            domestic animals, many diseases, such as smallpox and  tions can spread from region to region because persons
            measles, mutated forms that could survive only in dense  with infections but no visible symptoms can transport
            centers of human population connected by trade. They  diseases between continents in a single day. Many con-
            spread directly from person to person by air, water, food,  temporary epidemiologists believe that we are now at
            and touch and can live only in people. (They have no  greater risk of new epidemics than ever before.
            other reservoir organisms and no vectors, and cannot live
                                                                                                    Mark N. Cohen
            long in the air or on inanimate objects.) They promote
            powerful reactions in human hosts, which typically result  See also Diseases—Overview; Food
            in a struggle to the death: The human host either dies or
            develops immunity so powerful that the organism is
            destroyed. Either way, because the organism cannot live                 Further Reading
            long in any one host, its survival is dependent on a very  Acha P. N., & Szyfres, B. (1987). Zoonoses and communicable disease
            rapid movement from host to host.These parasites burn  common to man and animals (2nd ed.).Washington, DC: Pan Amer-
                                                                  ican Health Organization.
            like forest fires and die out if they run out of fuel. A con-  Cohen, M. N. (1989). Health and the rise of civilization. New Haven, CT:
            tinuous supply of fuel can be provided only by trans-  Yale University Press.
                                                                Cohen, M. N., & Armelagos, G. J. (1984). Paleopathology at the origins
            portation to new locations, immigration, or a very large
                                                                  of agriculture. New York: Academic Press.
            community size such that those who are immune pro-  Crosby,A.W.(1972).The Columbian exchange.Westport,CT: Greenwood.
            duce new babies as fast as the disease-fire burns. Not  Crosby, A. W. (1989). America’s forgotten pandemic. Cambridge, UK:
                                                                  Cambridge University Press.
            depending on any one human host, such diseases are  Garrett L. (1994). The coming plague. New York: Penguin.
            commonly exceptionally virulent.                    The geopolitics of world hunger. (2001). Boulder, CO: Reiner.
                                                                Goodman, A. H., Dufour, D. L., & Pelto, G. H. (2000). Nutritional
              Diseases maintained in urban areas typically strike
                                                                  anthropology. Mountain View, CA: Mayfield.
            only children born since the last sweep of the disease,  Greenblatt, C., & Spigelman, M. (2003). Emerging pathogens. Oxford,
            who are aided by parents now immune.The real danger   UK: Oxford University Press.
                                                                Harrison, G.A., & Waterlow, J. C. (1990). Diet and disease. Cambridge,
            occurs when such diseases arrive in populations where no  UK: Cambridge University Press.
            one has ever had the disease; here the death toll can be  Inhorn, M. C., & Brown, P. J. (1997). The anthropology of infectious dis-
                                                                  eases. Amsterdam: Gordon Breach.
            exceptionally high, leaving no one to care for—feed or
                                                                Kiple, K. (Ed.). (1993). The Cambridge world history of infectious disease.
            clean—anyone else. These conditions combined with     Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
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