- Globalization and disease
Globalization , the flow of information, goods, capital and people across political and geographic boundaries, has also helped to spread some of the deadliest infectious diseases known to humans. Dr. Daulaire. "Globalization and Health". Retrieved October 11, 2006 from http://www.globalhealth.org/assets/html/drmed3.html ] The spread of diseases across wide geographic scales has only increased through history. In the current era of globalization the world is more interdependent than at any other time. Efficient and inexpensive transportation has left few places inaccessible, and increased global trade in agricultural products has brought more and more people into contact with animal diseases that have subsequently jumpedspecies barriers.http://www.richardwellsresearch.com/richardwells/pdfs%20and%20documents/BJIC%20Oct]It is believed that globalization began during the Age of Exploration. An increase in travel also helped spread diseases to natives of land who had not previously been exposed. When a native population is infected with a new disease, where no
antibodies have been developed, the disease tends to run rampant within the population.Etiology , the modern branch ofscience that deals with the causes ofinfectious disease , recognizes five major modes of disease transmission: airborne, waterborne, bloodborne, by direct contact, and through vector (insect s or other creatures that carry germs from one species to another).Altman, Linda.(1998) "Plague and Pestilence a History of Infectious Disease". New Jersey:Enslows Publishers, Inc.] As humans began traveling over seas and across lands which were previously isolated research suggests that diseases have been spread by all five transmission modes.Travel patterns and globalization
The Age of Exploration generally refers to the period between the 15th and 17th centuries. During this time technological advances in
shipbuilding and navigation made it easier for nations to explore outside previous boundaries. Globalization has had many benefits, for example, new products to Europeans were discovered such astea ,silk andsugar when Europeans developed newtrade routes aroundAfrica toIndia and theSpice Islands ,Asia , and eventually running into theAmericas . In addition to trading in goods, many nations began to trade inslavery . Trading in slaves helped to introduce new diseases to new locations. During this time, differentsocieties began to integrate, increasing the concentration ofhumans andanimals in one place, and led to the emergence of new diseases.During this time sorcerers' and
witch doctor s' treatment of disease was often focused on magic andreligion , and healing the entirebody andsoul , rather than focusing on a few symptoms likemodern medicine . Early medicine often included the use ofherbs , andmeditation , and sometimes eventrephining [“One curious method of providing the disease with means of escape from the body was by making a hole, 2.5 to five centimeters across, in the skull of the victim—the practice of trepanning, or trephining. Trepanned skulls of prehistoric date have been found in Britain, France, and other parts of Europe and in Peru. Many of them show evidence of healing and, presumably, of the patient's survival. The practice still exists among primitive people in parts of Algeria, in Melanesia, and perhaps elsewhere, though it is fast becoming extinct. Medicine, History of. (2006). In Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved November 22, 2006, from Encyclopedia Britannica Online: http://www.search.eb.com/eb/article-35642] Severe diseases were often thought of assupernatural or magical. As a result, the destruction of the native peoples are more attributable togerms than to gunpowder. Over a period of four centuries, epidemic diseases wiped out as much as 90 percent of the American indigenous populations.In Europe during the age of exploration, diseases such as
smallpox andtuberculosis had been around forcenturies and people had developed antibodies to these and other diseases. When the Europeans traveled to new lands they carried these diseases with them. When these diseases were introduced for the first time to new populations of humans the effects on the native populations were widespread and deadly. TheColumbian Exchange , referring toChristopher Columbus 's first contact with the native peoples of theCaribbean , began the trade of animals, and plants, and unwittingly began an exchange of diseases.Humans began to recognize the fact that germs and
microbes exist in the 1800’s. Although, many scientists had ideas about germs through history, it wasn’t untilLouis Pasteur spread his theory about germs, and the need for washing hands andsanitation (particularly in medical practice) that anyone listened. Many people were quite skeptical, but on May 22, 1881 Pasteur persuasively demonstrated the validity of his germ theory of disease with the first successfulvaccination . Theanthrax vaccine was administered to 25sheep while another 25 was used as a control. On May 31, 1881 all of the sheep were exposed to anthrax. While all of the sheep in thecontrol group died, all of the vaccinated sheep remained alive.Trachtman, Paul. Smithsonian 2002. Center for Disease Control, Emerging and Infectious Diseases: Experimentation du Virus Charbonneux: “Le Pelerin,” 1922. article online Available from http://www.cdc.gov.ncidod/EID/vol8no2/cover.htm] Pasteur’s experiment would become a milestone in disease prevention. His findings, in conjunction with other vaccines that followed, changed the way globalization affected the world.Effects of globalization on disease in the modern world
Modern modes of
transportation allow more people and products totravel around the world at a faster pace, they also open the airways to the transcontinental movement of infectious disease vectors. [http://www.nap.edu/books/0309100984/html/22.html The Impact of Globalization on Infectious Disease Emergence and Control: Exploring the Consequences and Opportunities, Workshop Summary - Forum on Microbial Threats ] ] One example of this occurring isWest Nile Virus . It is believed that this disease reached theUnited States via “mosquitoes that crossed the ocean by riding in airplane wheel wells and arrived in New York City in 1999.” With the use of air travel, people are able to go to foreign lands, contract a disease and not have any symptoms of illness until they get home, having exposed others to the disease along the way.As medicine has progressed, many vaccines and cures have been developed for some of the worst diseases (plague, syphilis, typhus, cholera, malaria) the world has encountered. However, because the
evolution of diseaseorganisms is very rapid, even with vaccines we have difficulty providing full immunity to many diseases, and finding vaccines at all for some diseases remains extremely difficult. Without vaccines our global world remains vulnerable to infectious diseases.pecific diseases
Plague
Bubonic plague is a variant of the deadlyflea borne disease plague, which is caused by theenterobacteria "Yersinia pestis ", that devastated human population beginning in the14th century . Bubonic plague is primarily spread by fleas who lived on the commonblack rat . A human would become infected after being bitten by an infected flea. The first sign of an infection of bubonic plague is swelling of thelymph nodes , and the formation ofbuboes . These buboes would first appear in the groin or armpit area, and would often oozepus orblood . Eventually infected individuals would become covered with dark splotches caused by bleeding under the skin. The symptoms would be accompanied by a highfever , and within four to seven days an infected more than half the victims would die.http://www.mariner.org/exploration/index.php?page=faq. Retrieved October 15,2006.] During the 14th and 15th century, humans did not know that a bacterium was the cause of plague, and efforts to slow the spread were futile.The first recorded outbreak of plague occurred in
China in the 1330s, a time when China was engaged in substantial trade with western Asia and Europe. The plague struck Europe in October 1347. It was thought to have been brought into Europe through the port ofMessina ,Sicily , by a fleet of Genoese trading ships fromKaffa , a seaport on theCrimean peninsula . When the ship left port in Kaffa, many of the inhabitants of the town were dying, and the crew was in a hurry to leave. By the time the fleet reached Messina, all the crew were either dead or dying; and the rats they were carrying had slipped unnoticed to the shore.Within Europe, the plague struck port cities first, then followed both sea and land trade routes. It raged through
Italy intoFrance and theBritish Isles , and was carried over theAlps intoSwitzerland , and eastward intoHungary andRussia . For a time during the 14th and 15th centuries the plague would recede, but every ten to twenty years it would return. Laterepidemics however, were never as widespread as earlier outbreaks.Plague has never died out, and from 1896-1918 the Plague swept through India taking the lives of over 12.5 million people. Between 1906 and 1914 the Plague Research Commission was created, and published supplements to the Journal of Hygiene [ The Globalization of Disease? India and the Plague. I J Catanach.
Journal of World History . Honolulu: Spring 2001. Vol. 12, Iss. 1; p.131]Measles
Measles is a highly contagious airbornevirus that is spread by contact with infected oral and nasal fluids. When a person with measles coughs or sneezes they release microscopic particles into the air. During the 4-12 dayincubation period an infected individual will show no symptoms, but as the disease progresses the following symptoms will appear; runny nose, cough, red eyes, extremely high fever and a rash. Measles is anendemic disease , meaning that it has been continually present in a community, and many people develop resistance. In populations that have not been exposed to measles, exposure to a new disease can be devastating. In 1529, a measles outbreak inCuba killed two-thirds of the natives who had previously survived smallpox. Two years later was responsible for the deaths of half the population ofHonduras , had ravagedMexico ,Central America , and theInca civilization.Historically, measles was very prevalent throughout the world, as it is highly contagious. According to the National Immunization Program, 90% of people were infected with measles by age 15. Until the vaccine was developed in 1963, measles was considered to be deadlier than smallpox.Center for Disease Control & National Immunization Program. Measles History, article online 2001. Available from http://www.cdc.gov.nip/diseases/measles/history.htm] Vaccination reduced the number of reported by 98%, and major epidemics have predominantly occurred in unvaccinated populations, particularly nonwhite
Hispanic andAfrican American children under 5 years old. In 2000 a group of experts determined that measles was no longer epidemic in the United States, and the majority of cases that occur there are in people immigrating from other countries.Typhus
Typhus is caused by "
rickettsia ", which is transmitted to humans throughlice . The main vector fortyphus is therat flea . Flea bites and infected flea feces in the respiratory tract are the two most common methods of transmission. In area where rats are not common, typhus may also be transmitted throughcat andopossum fleas. [Francois Janbon, Phillipe Parola, Didier Raoult, Chantal Roure and Dirk Vogelaers. Center for Disease Control (CDC). Emerging Infectious Diseases, Murine Typhus in Travelers from Indonesia [article online] 1998. Available from http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/vol4no4/parola.htm. Accessed Nov. 20, 2006] Theincubation period of typhus is 7-14 days. The symptoms start with afever , then headache,rash and eventuallystupor . Spontaneous recovery occurs in 80-90% of victims.The first outbreak of typhus was recorded in 1489, when it is believed that troops from the
Balkans , hired by the Spanish army brought it to Spain with them. By 1490 Typhus traveled from the easternMediterranean intoSpain andItaly and by 1494 it had swept across Europe. More soldiers were killed from 1500-1914 by typhus than from allmilitary action during that time combined. Finally, duringWorld War I , preventativedelousing measures were instituted, and the disease began to decline.http://www.rhodes.edu/biology/glindquester/viruses/history.html] The creation ofantibiotic s has allowed disease to be controlled within two days of taking a 200 mg dose oftetracycline .yphilis
Syphilis is a
sexually transmitted disease that causes open sores,delirium and rotting skin, and is characterized by genitalulcers . Syphilis can also do damage to the nervous system, brain and heart. The disease can also be transmitted from mother to child. The origins ofsyphilis are unknown, and some historians argue that it descended from a twenty-thousand-year-old Africanzoonosis . Other historians place its emergence in theNew World , arguing that the crews of Columbus’s ships first brought the disease toEurope . The first recorded case of syphilis occurred inNaples in 1495, after King Charles VIII of France besieged the city of Naples,Italy . The soldiers, and the prostitutes who followed their camps, came from all corners of Europe. When they went home, they took the disease with them.Smallpox
Smallpox is a highly contagious disease caused by theVariola virus . There are four variations of smallpox; variola major, variola minor, haemorrhagic, and malignant, with the most common being variola major and variola minor. Symptoms of the disease includinghemorrhaging ,blindness , back ache,vomiting , generally occur shortly after the 12-17 day incubation period. The virus then begins to attackskin cells, and eventually leads to an eruption of pimples that cover the whole body. As the disease progresses thepimples will fill up with pus or merge together. This merging results in a sheet that can detach the bottom layer from the top layer of skin. The disease is easily transmitted through airborne pathways (coughing, sneezing, and breathing) as well as through contaminated bedding, clothing or other fabrics,It is believed that smallpox first emerged over 3000 years ago, probably in
India orEgypt , and has caused several devastatingepidemic s throughout the world (25). Smallpox was a common disease in the15th century , and was spread byexplorers and invaders. After Columbus landed on the island ofHispaniola , during his second voyage in 1493, local people started to die of avirulent infection . Before the smallpox epidemic started more than one million people had lived on theisland ; after only ten thousand had survived.During the
16th century a smallpox epidemic was brought to theAztec capitalTenochtitlan by Spanish soldiers. [ [http://www.mariner.org/exploration/index.php?type=explorersection&id=200 The Mariners' Museum | EXPLORATION through the AGES ] ]In
1617 , Smallpox reachedMassachusetts and came with earlier explorers, probably by way ofNova Scotia ,Canada .” By 1638 smallpox had reachedBoston, Massachusetts , in1721 an outbreak caused the city to be abandoned, the fleeing residents spread the disease throughout thethirteen colonies . Smallpox would go on to cause six separate outbreaks in the United States through1968 .The
smallpox vaccine was developed in1798 byEdward Jenner . By1979 the disease had been completely eradicated, with no new outbreaks. TheWHO stopped providing vaccinations and by1986 , vaccination was no longer available or necessary to anyone in the world except in the event of future outbreak. Currently the smallpox virus exists only inlaboratories (25).Leprosy
Leprosy , also known as Hansen’s Disease, is caused by abacillus , "Mycobacterium leprae ". It is achronic disease with an incubation period of up to five years. Symptoms often include irritation or erosion of the skin, and affects on theperipheral nerves , mucosa of the upper respiratory tract and eyes. The most common sign of leprosy are pale reddish spots on the skin that lack sensation.Leprosy probably originated in
India , more than four thousand years ago. It was prevalent in ancient societies inChina , Egypt and India, and was distributed throughout the world by various groups, includingRoman Legion naires,Crusaders , Spanishconquistador s, Asianseafarer s, European colonists, and Arab, African, and American slave traders. Some historians believe thatAlexander the Great 's troops brought leprosy from India to Europe during the 3rd century BC. [ [http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761578788/Leprosy.html Leprosy - MSN Encarta ] ] With the help of the crusaders and other travelers, leprosy reachedepidemic proportions by the13th century .Once detected, leprosy can be cured using multi-drug therapy (MDT), composed of two or three antibiotics, depending on the type of leprosy. In 1991 the World Health Assembly began an attempt to eliminate leprosy. By 2005 116 of 122 countries were reported to be leprosy free. [ [http://www.searo.who.int/en/section10/section373_11716.htm FAQ on Leprosy ] ]
Malaria
On Nov. 6, 1880
Alphonse Laveran discovered thatmalaria (then called "Marsh Fever") was a protozoan parasite, and that mosquitoes carry and transmit malaria. [National Center for Infectious Diseases, Division of Parasitic Diseases. Lavaran and the Discovery of the Malaria Parasite [article online] 2004. Available from http://www.cdc.gov/malaria/history/laveran.htm. Accessed on Nov. 10, 2006.] Malaria is aprotozoan infectious disease that is generally transmitted tohumans by mosquitoes between dusk and dawn. The European variety, known as "vivax" after the "Plasmodium vivax " parasite, causes a relatively mild, yet chronically aggravating disease. The west African variety called caused by thesporozoan parasite, "Plasmodium falciparum " and results in a severely debilitating and deadly disease.In 1492,
Malaria was a disease endemic toEurope and Western Africa. "Plasmodium falciparum" became a real threat to colonialists andindigenous people alike when it was introduced into the Americas along with theslave trade .Currently parts of thethird world are more affected by Malaria than the rest of the world, and many inhabitants of sub-Saharan Africa are affected by recurring attacks of malaria throughout their lives. [Kaplan, Robert D. “The Coming Anarchy.” Mathew Krain, Roxana Ma Newman, Patrick O’Meara, and Howard D. Mehlinger Editors. Globalization and the challenges of a new century. Bloomington:Indiana University Press; 2000. p. 40-42.] In many areas of Africa there is limitedrunning water and instead wells andcistern s are used, there are plenty of sites for breeding and spread of the disease. This is not a surprise since mosquitoes use areas ofstanding water likemarshes ,wetlands , and water drums to breed.Tuberculosis
The
bacterium that causestuberculosis , "Mycobacterium tuberculosis ", is generally spread when an infected personcough s and another person inhales the bacteria. Once inhaled TB frequently grows in thelungs , but can spread to any part of the body. Although it is very easy to spread TB, in most cases the human body is able to fend off the bacteria. However, TB can remaindormant in the body for years, and become active unexpectedly. If and when the disease does become active in the body, it can multiply rapidly, causing the person to develop many symptoms including cough (sometimes with blood), night sweats, fever, chest pains, loss of appetite and loss of weight. This disease can occur in both adults and children and is especially common among those with weak or undevelopedimmune system s.Tuberculosis (TB) has been one of history’s greatest killers, taking the lives of over 3 million people annually and is often called the "white plague". According to the WHO approximately fifty percent of people infected with TB live in
Asia . It is also the most prevalent, life threatening infections amongAIDS patients and has increased in areas where HIVseroprevalence is high. [http://www.searo.who.int/en/Section10/Section18/Section349.htm Hiv/Aids Faq ] ]Air travel and the other methods of travel which have made global interaction easier, have helped increase the spread of TB across different societies. Luckily, the BCG vaccine was developed, which preventsTB meningitis andmiliary TB in childhood, however the vaccine does not provide substantial protection against the more virulent forms of TB found among adults. Most forms of TB can be treated with antibiotics to kill the bacteria. The two antibiotics most commonly used arerifampicin andisoniazid .HIV/AIDS
AIDS/HIV is among the newest and deadliest diseases. According to theWorld Health Organization it is currently unknown where theHIV virus originated, and is believed that it may have been isolated within many groups throughout the world. It is believed that HIV arose from another, less harmful virus, that mutated and became more virulent. The first two AIDS/HIV cases were detected in 1981, and as of 2004, an estimated 1,039,000 to 1,185,000 persons in theUnited States were living with HIV/AIDS, [Center for Disease Control, Basic Statistics. 2006. [article online] . Available from http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/topics/surveillance/basic.htm.] and an estimated 39.5 million people worldwide are living withHIV ”.World Health Organization, Global AIDS epidemic continues to grow. 2006. [article online] . Available from http://www.who.int/hiv/mediacentre/news62/en/index.html.] The WHO also reports that there has been a 50% increase in HIV infected people since 2004 and despite global efforts, awareness and prevention programs don’t seem to be reducing the numbers of new HIV cases in many parts of the world. The biggest problem with prevention programs is that they are difficult to maintain and, as a result, the protective measures usually do not last long after the program stops.ee also
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