Germs, Genes, & Civilization: How Epidemics Shaped Who We Are Today

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by David P. Clark


  neomycin, resistance to, 247

  Nergal, 169

  nervous system, prion disease, 98-99

  New World. See indigenous Americans

  Nietzsche, Friedrich, 255

  Nightingale, Florence, 125, 168

  1918 flu epidemic. See Spanish flu of 1918

  Nixon, Richard, 135

  noninfectious disease, infectious disease versus, 34-36

  Norovirus, 94

  novel diseases. See emerging diseases

  nuts, contamination of, 94-95

  O

  O’Daniel, W., 142

  O’nyong Nyong, 238

  Odyssey (Homer), 177

  old age, 35

  Old World. See Europeans

  onions, 178-179

  opportunistic diseases, 60, 112, 251-252

  origin of

  biological warfare, 130

  cholera, 71-72

  diarrheal diseases, 70-71

  disease, 205

  Africa, 13-17

  animals, 17-24

  HIV/AIDS, 150-151

  indigenous Americans, 193, 203

  influenza, 243

  Islamic Empire, 91

  leprosy, 30-31

  mad cow disease, 99-101

  malaria, 84

  measles, 25-28

  scapegoats, 175-177

  syphilis, 145-147

  typhus, 209-211

  The Origin of Species (Darwin), 8, 196

  Orosius, plague of, 87

  Oroya fever, 196

  oscillation of disease virulence, 42-44

  overpopulation

  future predictions, 253

  opportunistic diseases and, 251-252

  overprescription of antibiotics, 249

  P

  pandemics. See epidemics

  parainfluenza, 28

  parasitic worms, 153, 168

  Pasteur, Louis, 137

  penicillin, 113

  Penicillium, 250

  Penicillium notatum, 113

  Persian invasion of Greece, 123

  person-to-person contact, as transmission method, 38

  pestilence. See disease

  physical benefits of religion, 164

  Phytophthora infestans, 109

  Picardy sweats, 50

  pigs, diseases from, 21

  Pilgrim’s Pride, 94

  pinta, 148

  Pizarro, Francisco, 200

  plague. See bubonic plague

  plague of Cyprian, 88

  plague of Justinian, 86, 90-91, 231

  plague of Orosius, 87

  Plagues, Priests and Demons (Reff), 182

  plagues. See disease

  plasmids

  disease virulence and, 63-65

  transmissible antibiotic resistance, 248

  Plasmodium, 13

  Plasmodium falciparum, 15, 45

  pneumonic plague, mortality rate, 187

  poisoning. See also food poisoning

  accidental versus intentional, 34

  ergot poisoning, 106-109

  poliomyelitis, 225-226

  resistance to, 225

  transmission method, 39

  political response to mad cow disease, 101-102

  polytheism

  in Middle Ages, 188

  monotheism versus, 179-181

  Pommery, Madame, 137

  population collapse, periods of, 231-232

  population density. See also ancient civilizations; cities

  accuracy of estimates, 220

  after bubonic plague, 218-219

  of ancient Athens, 28

  during Middle Ages, 217-218

  effects of

  on disease transmission, 56-59

  on disease virulence, 41-44

  efficiency of transmission methods and, 242

  European empires versus Third World nations, 226

  future predictions, 253

  in imperial expansion, 120-122

  indigenous Americans, 197

  opportunistic diseases and, 251-252

  replenishing in cities, 213-214

  required for measles, 25

  in Roman Empire, 82

  susceptibility to disease and, 8

  population statistics, 231

  positive aspects of epidemics, 6-8, 53, 56

  potato blight, 109-110

  pre-Columbian Americans. See indigenous Americans

  predicting the future, 252-256

  prion disease, 98-99

  mad cow disease

  in humans, 102-103

  origin of, 99-101

  political response to, 101-102

  scrapie, 99

  prion protein, resistance to mad cow disease, 55

  Procopius, 89, 91

  promiscuity

  puritanism versus, 141-143

  rates of, propaganda versus, 144-145

  propaganda, actual promiscuity rates versus, 144-145

  prostitution

  sacred prostituion, 160-161

  tolerance for, 154

  in Victorian-era England, 142

  protection from evil spirits, 178-179

  protozoa, mutation rate, 61

  protozoan diseases, rate of evolution, 24

  Prusiner, Stanley, 98

  psychological effects of biological warfare, 131

  public health

  AIDS and, 156, 158

  breakdowns in, 236

  Puccinia graminis, 251

  punishment, disease as, 179-181

  puritanism, promiscuity versus, 141-143

  Puritans, 202-203

  Q–R

  quarantine

  in ancient religious beliefs, 171

  during bubonic plague, 40

  rabbits

  biological warfare against, 137-138

  population of Australia, 53

  rabies, 23, 40

  radiation, sterilizing meat with, 94

  rats. See rodents

  Re (Egyptian sun god), 170

  recalls of contaminated meat, 94

  recent diseases from animals, 19-21

  Reff, Daniel, 182

  Reformation, 222

  regulations, food safety, 95

  religion. See also ancient religious beliefs

  Buddhism in Japan, 186-187

  Coptic Christianity, 184-185

  decline in industrial Europe, 190-191

  effect of bubonic plague on, 187-189, 221-223

  effect of epidemics on, 165-166

  expectations and, 165-166

  health benefits of, 163-164

  hygiene and, 171-173

  implications of indigenous Americans’ mortality rate, 202-203

  messianic Taoism, 185-186

  reaction

  to AIDS, 155-156

  to Great Plague of 1665, 189-190

  to venereal disease (VD), 154-155

  rise of Christianity, 181-184

  science versus, 191-192

  views

  on homosexuality, 157-158

  of sexual morality, history of, 159-162

  religious mania, fungal diseases and, 106-109

  rendering process, effect on mad cow disease, 100-101

  Republic of Texas separatists, 133

  reservoirs of disease, effect on disease virulence, 46-47

  resistance to disease. See also susceptibility

  antibiotic resistance, 247-250

  cystic fibrosis, cholera resistance and, 78-81

  explained, 48-49

  extinction of disease and, 49, 51

  genetic sources of, 4, 6, 9, 53, 56, 227-228

  group survival and, 52-53

  HIV/AIDS resistance, 158-159

  immune system aggressiveness, 228-229

  lowered resistance to tuberculosis, 223

  milder disease versus, 51-52

  poliomyelitis immunity, 225

  tropical diseases, 122-123

  tuberculosis resistance, 224

  Richard the Lionheart (king of Engla
nd), 124

  rickets, 208

  Rickettsias, 127, 208

  rinderpest, 27

  RNA mutation rate, 62

  Rocky Mountain spotted fever, 195, 208

  rodents

  diseases from, 21, 29-30

  effect of climate change on spread of disease, 245

  as Lassa fever carriers, 239

  leprosy in, 31

  as transmission method, 39, 216-217

  Roman Empire

  bubonic plague in, 90-92

  effect of disease on, 1-4, 81-86

  fall of, 83-86, 182

  history of epidemics in, 86-90

  malaria in, 83, 85-86

  population collapse in, 231

  religious beliefs, effect of epidemics on, 166

  rise of, 81-83, 121

  rotavirus, 71

  RU486 pills (“abortion pills”), effect on sexual morality, 143

  rubella, 214

  Rudolf II (Habsberg emperor), 173

  rural areas

  population replenishment in, 213-214

  disease in, 103-104

  Russia

  biological warfare program, 135

  diphtheria in, 236

  Napoleon’s defeat in, 128

  typhus in World War I, 128

  Russo-Japanese War, 115, 125

  rye, ergot poisoning from, 106-109

  S

  sacred prostitution, 160-161

  Salmonella, 64, 246

  contamination sources, 94, 96

  infection rate, 95

  transmission method, 215

  typhoid fever from, 127

  Salmonella typhi, 47, 64

  San of the Kalahari Desert, 166

  sand-lice disease, 210

  sandflies, 196

  scapegoats, origin of, 175-177

  scarlet fever, transmission method, 215

  schistosome worms, resistance to, 51

  schistosomiasis, virulence of, 45

  science, religion versus, 191-192

  scrapie, 99

  scrub typhus, 210

  Sekhmet, 169-170

  The Selfish Gene (Dawkins), 59

  Semitic cultures, religious beliefs of, 172

  Sennacharib the Assyrian, 203

  Serbians, typhus in World War I, 128

  serpents, in ancient religious beliefs, 168

  sexual morality. See also promiscuity

  effect of economy on, 143

  effect of technological advances on, 143

  religious views on, 154-155, 159-162

  sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). See venereal disease (VD)

  The Shape of Things to Come (Wells), 252

  sharing needles, role in AIDS transmission, 153

  sheep

  diseases from, 21

  scrapie in, 99

  shigatoxin, 64

  Shigella, 64

  shingles, 47

  Shomu (emperor of Japan), 187

  Shotoku (empress of Japan), 187

  sick, caring for, 167, 181-184

  sickle cell anemia, 5, 15, 54

  sickness. See disease

  SIV (Simian Immunodeficiency Virus), 22, 150

  skin infections, relationship with venereal disease (VD), 148-149

  Skrælings, 211-212

  skull, cutting hole in, 178

  slavery, African diseases and, 204

  sleeping sickness

  cause of, 13

  role in warfare, 122-123

  virulence of, 45

  smallpox, 10, 15, 54, 214

  as biological warfare, 135, 203-204

  Catholic Church view on vaccination, 172

  effect on indigenous Americans, 130, 200

  eradication of, 22, 215

  Islamic expansion and, 119

  in Japan, 186-187

  Japanese remedies for, 178

  mortality rates, 53

  origin and spread of, 20-21

  resistance to, 49, 52

  in Roman Empire, 88

  transmission method, 38, 204

  variants of, 214

  Snow, John, 72-73

  societal factors

  in infectious disease transmission, 69-70

  in susceptibility to disease, 10-11

  societal impact on disease transmission, 56-59

  soil erosion, 85

  soldiers. See military

  Soviet Union. See Russia

  Spanish flu of 1918, 125

  mortality rate, 242-243

  virulence of, 243-244

  spirits, as cause of disease, 167

  spiritual benefits of religion, 163

  spirochetes, 148, 234

  sponges, sterilization process, 96

  spongiform encephalopathy, 98

  spotted fevers in indigenous Americans, 208-209

  spread of disease. See transmission methods; virulence of disease

  St. Anthony’s fire, 107

  STDs (sexually transmitted diseases). See venereal disease (VD)

  Stefani, Marchione di Coppo, 220

  sterilization process

  for meat, 94

  for sponges/dishrags, 96

  strength of disease. See virulence of disease

  Streptomyces, 250

  streptomycin, resistance to, 247

  stroke, 35

  Sumerians, religious beliefs of, 169-172

  survival rate, factors in, 183

  susceptibility to disease, 50. See also resistance to disease

  American Indians, 17-18, 54

  factors in, 8-11

  to HIV/AIDS, 159

  to tuberculosis, 236

  sweating sickness, extinction of, 50-51

  swine flu, 199, 244

  syphilis, 143, 234

  cause of, 148

  in indigenous Americans, 195

  milder version of, 41, 51

  military casualties from, 126

  origin of, 145-147

  rates of, 144

  religious views on, 154

  transmission method, 38

  in World War I, 125

  T

  Takman, 176-177

  Taoism, 185-186

  TB. See tuberculosis

  technological advances, effect on sexual morality, 143

  technology, spread of, 255

  technology-borne diseases, 246-247

  tekomenos, 177

  Third World nations, population density, 226

  Thomas á Becket (saint), 127

  Thucydides, 50

  ticks. See insects

  tissues, as disease carriers, 46

  towns. See cities

  trachoma, 145, 148

  trading, spread of disease via, 206

  transmissible antibiotic resistance, 248

  transmission methods. See also virulence of disease

  bacterial diseases, 215

  bubonic plague, 216-217

  changing, 233-234

  Ebolavirus, 240

  efficiency of, 242

  emerging diseases, 241

  HIV/AIDS, 151-153

  infectious disease, 37-40

  Lassa fever, 239

  measles, 204

  by military, 116-118

  origin of disease and, 16-17

  rodents/insects, 29-30

  smallpox, 204

  spotted fevers, 208

  technology-borne diseases, 246-247

  typhoid fever, 127

  typhus, 127, 211

  trench fever, 197

  trepanation, 178

  Treponema pallidum, 148

  tropical diseases

  role in warfare, 122-123

  slavery and, 204

  tropical regions, disease in, 14

  Trypanosoma cruzi, 196

  Trypanosoma evansi, 150

  trypanosome disease of horses, 150

  trypanosomes, 13

  tsutsumagoshi fever, 210

  tuberculosis

  decline in, 233

  future predict
ions, 253

  HIV/AIDS and, 156

  in indigenous Americans, 195, 207-208

  lowered resistance to, 223

  mortality rate, 14, 224, 238

  origin of, 17

  re-emergence of, 236-237

  resistance to, 51, 224

  susceptibility to, 236

  symptoms of, 223

 

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