14.H. Koplik, “The diagnosis of the invasion of measles from a study of the exanthema as it appears on the buccal mucous membrane,” Archives of Pediatrics 79 (1962) 162.
15.F. C. Robbins, “John Franklin Enders: February 10, 1897–September 8, 1985, “Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 135(3) (1991), 453–7.
16.Ibid.
17.M. Wortman, The Millionaires’ Unit: The Aristocratic Flyboys who Fought the Great War and Invented American Air Power, (New York: PublicAffairs, 2007).
18.F. C. Robbins, “John Franklin Enders: February 10, 1897–September 8, 1985, “Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 135(3) (1991), 453–7.
19.J. F. Enders, “John Franklin Enders papers” in Yale University Manuscripts and Archives, (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1988).
20.F. Fenner, P. M. De Burgh, Hugh Kingsley Ward (1887–1972), Bacteriologist (Carlton, Australia: Australian Dictionary of Biography, 2002).
21.Ibid.
22.J. F. Enders, “John Franklin Enders papers” in Yale University Manuscripts and Archives, (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1988).
23.A. E. Feller, J. F. Enders, T. H. Weller, “The prolonged existence of vaccinia virus in high titre and living cells in roller tube cultures of chick embryonic tissues.” The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 72(4) (1940), 367–88.
24.J. F. Enders, “John Franklin Enders papers” in Yale University Manuscripts and Archives, (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1988).
25.C. D. Johnson, E. W. Goodpasture, “An investigation of the etiology of mumps,” Journal of Experimental Medicine, 59(1) (1934), 1–22.
26.K. Habel, “Cultivation of mumps virus in the developing chick embryo and its application to studies of immunity to mumps in man,” Public Health Reports, 60(8), (1945), 201–12.
27.M. Wadman, The Vaccine Race (New York: Viking, 2017).
28.M. Vogel, Gene Tierney: A Biography (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2014).
29.A. Davidson, “Wakefield’s Vaccine Follies.” The New Yorker, May 26, 2010. Web. February 16, 2018.
30.A. Christie, R. Leach, The Mirror Crack’d from Side to Side (Glasgow, UK: Collins, 1962).
31.M. Wadman, The Vaccine Race (New York: Viking, 2017).
32.R. L. King, “This man’s infected blood created the world’s first measles vaccine.” The Toronto Star, February 18, 2015. Web. February 16, 2018.
33.J. F. Enders, S. L. Katz, A. Holloway, “Development of Attenuated Measles Virus Vaccines: A Summary of Recent Investigation,” American Journal of Diseases of Children 103(3) (1962) 335–340.
34.“Lives Saved,” ScienceHeroes.com, Lives Saved, Web. February 15, 2018
35.“Miles City, Montana,” Wikipedia, last modified January 31, 2018, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miles_City,_Montana.
36.M. Sandoz, The Battle of the Little Bighorn, (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 1978).
37.N. A. Miles, Personal Recollections and Observations of General Nelson A. Miles (New York: Werner Company, 1897).
38.“Anna Uelsmann Hillemann” FindAGrave.com. Web. February 16, 2018.
39.P. A. Offit, Vaccinated: One Man’s Quest to Defeat the World’s Deadliest Diseases (New York: Harper Collins, 2007).
40.Ibid.
41.Anonymous, “Maurice Hilleman,” The Telegraph (London) April 14, 2005. Web. February 16, 2018.
42.S. Armstrong, p53: The Gene that Cracked the Cancer Code (London: Bloomsbury, 2014).
43.Anonymous, “Maurice Hilleman,” The Telegraph (London) April 14, 2005. Web. February 16, 2018.
44.L. Newman, “Maurice Hilleman,” British Medical Journal, 330(7498) (2005) 1028.
45.P. A. Offit, Vaccinated: One Man’s Quest to Defeat the World’s Deadliest Diseases (New York: Harper Collins, 2007).
46.R. Coniff, “A Forgotten Pioneer of Vaccines,” New York Times, May 6, 2013. Web. February 16, 2018.
47.Anonymous, “Jeryl L. Hilleman Wed in California,” New York Times, March 20, 1988. Web. February 16, 2018.
48.M. Wadman, The Vaccine Race (New York: Viking, 2017).
49.P. A. Offit, Vaccinated: One Man’s Quest to Defeat the World’s Deadliest Diseases (New York: Harper Collins, 2007).
50.S. S. Sprigge, The Life and Times of Thomas Wakley (Malabar, FL: Krieger Publishing Company, 1974).
51.“Profile: Dr Andrew Wakefield,” BBC News, January 27, 2010. Web. February 16, 2018.
52.A. J. Wakefield, R. M. Pittilo, R. Sim, S. L. Cosby, J. R. Stephenson, A. P. Dhillon, R. E. Pounder, “Evidence of persistent measles virus infection in Crohn’s disease,” Journal of Medical Virology 39(4) (1993) 345–53.
53.S. Ghosh, E. Armitage, D. Wilson, P. Minor, M. Afzal, “Detection of persistent measles virus infection in Crohn’s disease: current status of experimental work,” Gut 48(6) (2001) 748–752.
54.A. J. Wakefield, S. H. Murch, A. Anthony, J. Linnell, D. M. Casson, M. Malik, M. Berelowitz, A. P. Dhillon, M. A. Thomson, P. Harvey, A. Valentine, S. E. Davies, J. A. Walker-Smith, “RETRACTED: Ileal-lymphoid-nodular hyperplasia, non-specific colitis, and pervasive development disorder in children. The Lancet, 351(9103) (1998), 637–41.
55.E. Bleuler. “Autistic thinking.” In D. Rapaport, Organization and Pathology of Thought: Selected Sources. (New York: Columbia University Press, 1951), 399–437.
56.R. Kuhn, C. H. Cahn, “Eugen Bleuler’s Concepts of Psychopathology,” History of Psychiatry 15(3) (2004) 361–366.
57.“Autism,” Oxford English Dictionary, Web. February 16, 2018.
58.C. J. Newschaffer, L. A. Croen, J. Daniels, E. Giarelli, J. K. Grether, S. E. Levy, D. S. Mandell, L. A. Miller, J. Pinto-Martin, J. Reaven, “The epidemiology of autism spectrum disorders,” Annual Reviews of Public Health 28 (2007) 235–258.
59.S. Lundström, A. Reichenberg, H. Anckarsäter, P. Lichtenstein, C. Gillberg, “Autism phenotype versus registered diagnosis in Swedish children: prevalence trends over 10 years in general population samples,” British Medical Journal, 350 (2015) h1961.
60.T. Hodgkin, The History of England from the Earliest Times to the Norman Conquest (London: Longmans, Green and Company, 1906).
61.B. Deer, “Re: Quick Question.” Message to Michael S. Kinch. May 9, 2017. E-mail.
62.B. Deer, “Rights for gays in the face of NHS ‘homophobia,’” Health and Social Service Journal 89(4643) (1979) 618.
63.M Briggs, M. Briggs, “Oral contraceptives and vitamin nutrition,” The Lancet 303(7868) (1974) 1234–1235.
64.B. Deer, “The pill: professor’s safety tests were faked,” The Sunday Times (London), September 28, 1986. Web. February 16, 2018.
65.B. Deer, “Top-selling drug may have killed hundreds in Britain,” The Sunday Times (London), February 27, 1994. Web. February 16, 2018.
66.B. Deer, “Hard Sell,” The Sunday Times (London), March 6, 1994. Web. February 16, 2018.
67.B. Deer, “Re: Quick Question.” Message to Michael S. Kinch. May 9, 2017. E-mail.
68.B. Deer, “When needs outweighs blame—After a ‘vaccine-damage’ court ruling last week, children will not get help. The Sunday Times (London), April 3, 1988. Web. February 16, 2018.
69.B. Deer, “Re: Quick Question.” Message to Michael S. Kinch. May 9, 2017. E-mail.
70.B. Deer, “The Vanishing Victims,” The Sunday Times (London), November 1, 1998. Web. February 16, 2018.
71.B. Deer, “AidsVax: the long shot,” The Sunday Times (London), October 3, 1999. Web. February 16, 2018.
72.B. Deer, “Re: Quick Question.” Message to Michael S. Kinch. May 9, 2017. E-mail.
73.Ibid.
74.Ibid.
75.B. Deer, “Fresh doubts cast on MMR study data,” The Sunday Times (London), February 22, 2004. Web. February 16, 2018.
76.B. Deer, “MMR: the truth behind the crisis,” The Sunday Times (London), February 22, 2004. Web. February 16, 2018.
77.Ibid.
78.“MMR—what they didn’t tell you,” Dispatches. Channel 4 (United Kingdo
m), London. November 18, 2004. Television.
79.N. Banks-Smith, “Let them eat cake,” The Guardian (London), November 21, 2004. Web. February 16, 2018.
80.“Eady Judgement” BrianDeer.com, http://briandeer.com/wakefield/eady-judgment.htm. Web. February 16, 2018.
81.B. Deer, “Exposed: Andrew Wakefield and the MMR-autism fraud.” The Sunday Times (London), February 8, 2009. Web. February 16, 2018.
82.F. Godlee, J. Smith, H. Marcovitch, “Wakefield’s article linking MMR vaccine and autism was fraudulent,” British Medical Journal, 342, (2011), 7452.
83.Editors of The Lancet, “Retraction—Ileal-lymphoid-nodular hyperplasia, non-specific colitis, and pervasive developmental disorder in children,” The Lancet 375(9713) (2010) 445.
84.S. Mnookin, “The problems with the BMJ’s Wakefield-fraud story.” The Panic Virus, The problems with the BMJ’s Wakefield-fraud story. January 6, 2011. sethmnookin.com/2011/01/06/the-problems-with-the-bmjs-wakefield-fraud-story/
85.S. Mnookin, The Panic Virus: A True Story of Medicine, Science, and Fear (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2011).
86.S. Mnookin, “The problems with the BMJ’s Wakefield-fraud story.” The Panic Virus, The problems with the BMJ’s Wakefield-fraud story. January 6, 2011. sethmnookin.com/2011/01/06/the-problems-with-the-bmjs-wakefield-fraud-story/
87.E. Kohn, “‘Vaxxed: From Cover-Up to Catastrophe’ is Designed to Trick You,” IndieWire, April 1, 2016, Web. February 16, 2018.
88.P. Belluck, M. Ryzik, “Robert De Niro Defends Screening of Anti-Vaccine Film at Tribeca Festival,” New York Times, March 25, 2016. Web. February 16, 2018.
89.S. Goodman, “Robert De Niro Pulls Anti-Vaccine Documentary From Tribeca Film Festival,” New York Times, March 26, 2016. Web. February 16, 2018.
90.The Hollywood Reporter Staff, “Hollywood’s Biggest Anti-Vaccine Proponents.” The Hollywood Reporter. September 10, 2014. Web. February 16, 2018.
91.C. Ross, Andrew Wakefield appearance at Trump inaugural ball triggers social media backlash, STAT News, January 21, 2017. Web. February 16, 2018.
92.M. McKee, S. L. Greer, D. Stuckler, “What will Donald Trump’s presidency mean for health? A scorecard,” The Lancet 389(10070) (2017) 748–754.
93.L. Garratt, “Donald Trump and the Anti-Vaxxer Conspiracy Theorists,” Foreign Policy, January 11, 2017. Web. February 16, 2018.
94.M. Lerner, “Anti-vaccine doctor meets with Somalis,” Star Trbune (Minneapolis), March 24, 2011. Web. February 16, 2018.
95.K. Almond, “Somalis finding their place in Minnesota.” CNN, February 1, 2017. Web. February 16, 2018.
96.E. R. Wolff, D. J. Madlon-Kay, “Childhood vaccine beliefs reported by Somali and non-Somali parents,” The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine 27(4) (2014) 458–464.
97.L. H. Sun, “Anti-vaccine activists spark a state’s worst measles outbreak in decades,” Washington Post, May 5, 2017. Web. February 16, 2018.
98.J. Howard, “Anti-vaccine groups blamed in Minnesota measles outbreak,” CNN, May 8, 2017. Web. February 16, 2018.
99.M. J. Smith, S. S. Ellenberg, L. M. Bell, D. M. Rubin, “Media coverage of the measles -mumps-rubella vaccine and autism controversy and its relationship to MMR immunization rates in the United States,” Pediatrics 121(4) (2008) e836–e843.
100.Y. T. Yang, P. L. Delamater, T. F. Leslie, M. M. Mello, “Sociodemographic predictors of vaccination exemptions on the basis of personal belief in California,” American Journal of Public Health, 106(1) (2016) 172–177.
101.H. Abbey, “An examination of the Reed-Frost theory of epidemics,” Human Biology 24(3) (1952) 201.
102.A. W. Hedrich, “Monthly estimates of the child population “susceptible” to measles, 1900–1931, Baltimore, MD.” American Journal of Epidemiology, 17(3) (1933) 613–36.
103.A. Hedrich, “The ‘normal’ for epidemic diseases,” American Journal of Public Health 17(7) (1927) 691–698
104.P. E. Fine, “Herd immunity: history, theory, practice,” Epidemiologic Reviews 15(2) (1993) 265–302.
105.D. Adams, R. Jajosky, U. Ajani, J. Kriseman, P. Sharp, D. Onwen, A. Schley, W. Anderson, A. Grigoryan, A. Aranas, Summary of notifiable diseases—United States, 2012, Morbidity and mortality weekly Report, 61(53) (2014) 1–121.
106.J. Bixler, G. Botelho, “361 cases of mumps in central Ohio,” CNN, May 16, 2014. Web. February 16, 2018.
107.A. Stapleton, D. Goldschmidt, “60 reported cases of mumps at University of Illinois since April,” CNN, July 31, 2015. Web. February 16, 2018.
108.The Associated Press, “University of Missouri mumps outbreak passes 200-cases mark.” St Lois Post-Dispatch, December 16, 2016. Web. February 16, 2018.
Chapter 10: When Future Shocks Become Current Affairs
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3.S. David, Operation Thunderbolt: Flight 139 and the Raid on Entebbe Airport, the Most Audacious Hostage Rescue Mission in History (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2015).
4.Anonymous, “Climate: Entebbe.” Climate-Data.Org, en.climate-data.org /location/765748/.
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10.G. Symcox, “Louis XIV and the Outbreak of the Nine Years War” in Louis XIV and Europe (New York: Springer, 1976), 179–212.
11.M. S. Pernick, “Politics, parties and pestilence: epidemic yellow fever in Philadelphia and the rise of the first party system. The William and Mary Quarterly, 29(4) (1972), 559–86.
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13.J. H. Powell, Bring out Your Dead: The Great Plague of Yellow Fever in Philadelphia in 1793 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1993).
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15.E. Chaves-Carballo, “Carlos Finlay and yellow fever: triumph over adversity,” Military Medicine 170(10) (2005).
16.D. P. Pentón, “Celebridades médicas y acontecimientos políticos, una mirada desde la historia de Francia,” Panorama Cuba y Salud 9(1) (2014) 20–28.
17.A. Reyes-Santos, Our Caribbean Kin: Race and Nation in the Neoliberal Antilles (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2015).
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19.W. B. Bean, Walter Reed: A Biography, (Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 1982).
20.H. A. Kelly, Walter Reed and Yellow Fever (New York: McClure, Phillips, 1907).
21.W. B. Bean, Walter Reed: A Biography, (Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 1982).
22.W. Reed, J. Carroll, A. Agramonte, J. W. Lazear, “The etiology of yellow fever—a preliminary note,” Public Health Papers and Reports 26 (1900) 37.
23.W. Reed, Propagation of Yellow Fever: Observations Based on Recent Researches (New York: William Wood & Company, 1901).
24.C. Finlay, “Carlos Finlay and Yellow Fever,”
The Journal of Parasitology 28(2) (1942) 172–174.
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26.H. Noguchi, “Yellow fever research, 1918–1924: A summary,” Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 28(10) (1925).
27.T. P. Monath, “Yellow fever vaccine,” Expert Review of Vaccines 4(4) (2005) 553–574.
28.M. Theiler, H. H. Smith, “The use of yellow fever virus modified by in vitro cultivation for human immunization,” The Journal of Experimental Medicine 65(6) (1937) 787.
29.E. Norrby, “Yellow fever and Max Theiler: the only Nobel Prize for a virus vaccine,” Journal of Experimental Medicine 204(12) (2007) 2779–2784.
30.S. B. Halstead, “Dengue virus–mosquito interactions,” Annu. Rev. Entomol. 53 (2008) 273–291.
31.J. G. Rigau-Pérez, “The early use of break-bone fever (Quebranta huesos, 1771) and dengue (1801),” The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 59(2) (1998) 272–274.
32.B. Rush, An Account of the Bilious Remitting Fever as it Appeared in Philadelphia, Medical Inquiries and Observations (Philadelphia: Prichard and Hall, 1789), 104–107.
33.W. R. Smart, “On dengue or dandy fever,” British Medical Journal 1(848) (1877) 382.
34.R. Preston, The Hot Zone—A Terrifying New Story (New York: Random House, 1994).
35.M. K. Bhattacharya, S. Maitra, A. Ganguly, A. Bhattacharya, A. Sinha, “Dengue: a growing menace—a snapshot of recent facts, figures & remedies,” International Journal of Biomedical Science, 9(2) (2013) 61–7.
36.B. Rush, An Account of the Bilious Remitting Fever as it Appeared in Philadelphia, Medical Inquiries and Observations (Philadelphia: Prichard and Hall, 1789), 104–107.
37.J. G. Rigau-Pérez, “The early use of break-bone fever (Quebranta huesos, 1771) and dengue (1801),” The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 59(2) (1998) 272–274.
38.D. J. Gubler, “Dengue and dengue hemorrhagic fever,” Clinical Microbiology Reviews 11(3) (1998) 480–496.
39.P. K. Lumsden, “William Hepburn Russell Lumsden,” British Medical Journal 324(7352) (2002) 1527.
Between Hope and Fear Page 42