Smallpox, yellow fever, malaria, and polio, fearful diseases that once beset Americans, are now largely, just unhappy history. Yet from our confrontations with these past plagues come lessons that inform today’s struggles to understand and remedy problems like HIV/AIDS, coronary heart disease, and Ebola infection. American Plagues weaves stories of encounters with epidemics over our history with lessons that aid our present understanding of health and disease.
Doctors and clergy, writers and newsmen, public health institutions, and even an entire town relate their personal experiences with various outbreaks and the ways they were identified, contained, and treated. The stories are filled with ambition and accomplishment, jealousy and disappointment, public spirit and self-interest, egotism and modesty. Some episodes lead to vital discoveries. Others were unproductive. Yet each proved instructive and expanded our abilities to gather and process information in ways that improve medicine and public health today.
[i]American Plagues[/i] gives readers insights into some of the people and events that make up our rich public health history as well as skills to better grasp the complex health information that cascades upon us from the media.
Author(s): Stephen H Gehlbach
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Year: 2016
Language: English
Pages: 312
CONTENTS......Page 6
PREFACE......Page 8
Ch.01 GUNPOWDER AND CALOMEL......Page 12
Ch02. DOCTORS AND MINISTERS......Page 32
Ch03. NODDLE’S ISLAND EXPERIMENT......Page 52
Ch04. SCOURGE OF THE MIDDLE WEST......Page 70
Ch05. IMPROVING THE NUMBERS......Page 90
Ch06. ADIRONDACK CURE......Page 112
Ch07. THE BEGINNING AND THE END......Page 140
Ch08. A CANCER GROWS......Page 164
Ch09. SEARCHING AMERICA’S HEART......Page 186
Ch10. A CURE FOR COMPLACENCY......Page 206
Ch11. TOO LITTLE, TOO MUCH......Page 230
Ch12. ANOTHER KIND OF PLAGUE......Page 250
NOTES......Page 266
BIBLIOGRAPHY......Page 284
INDEX......Page 296
ABOUT THE AUTHOR......Page 312