by Bryn Barnard
Text and illustrations copyright © 2005 by Bryn Barnard
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the copyright holders, except for brief passages quoted by a reviewer in a newspaper or magazine.
Published by Crown Publishers, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
CROWN and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.
www.randomhouse.com/kids
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Barnard, Bryn.
Outbreak : plagues that changed history / written and illustrated by Bryn Barnard.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-0-307-48925-8
1. Communicable diseases—History— Juvenile literature. 2. Epidemics—History—Juvenile literature.
3. Diseases and history—Juvenile literature. I. Title.
RA643.B37 2006 614.4’973—dc22 2005015086
v3.1
For François Dubau, 1955–2004
Acknowledgments
Outbreak is a book of science and history. Any errors are my responsibility.
Still, no book is created alone. I am grateful to the many people who helped with this one. Marion Weber helped me design the handsome dummy I used to pitch this idea to Crown Books for Young Readers. The San Juan Library’s interlibrary loan program was my essential research tool. Paul Chadwick provided insightful critiques of my illustrations. Trudy Loucks, couturier at San Juan Community Theatre, provided me with the props and costumes I used to make these paintings. Daniel and Judy Finn, Fred and Xiao Fei Yockers, Marsha Rachlin, Elizabeth Pratt, Randy Hill, Ben White, Tom Holzhauser, Ladd Holroy, my wife Rebecca, my daughter Wynn, and my son Parks were my gracious models.
Dr. Amy Bloom of the Bureau of Global Health, Office of HIV/AIDS, Technical Leadership and Research Division of the U.S. Agency for International Development in Washington, D.C., offered me useful research advice. Dr. Robert Quick of the Foodborne and Diarrheal Diseases Branch of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta critiqued my chapter on cholera and informed me about the CDC’s Safe Water System. Dr. Susan Mahoney of Inter-Island Medical Center, San Juan Island, and Dr. Joseph Knight of Group Health, Seattle, read drafts of my manuscript. So did Sam Connery of Friday Harbor, who also supplied me with a voluminous array of articles, newspaper clippings, magazines, and books on infectious disease that were the basis for many chapters. They all provided valuable feedback. Kevin Brown, trust archivist and Alexander Fleming Laboratory Museum curator at St. Mary’s Hospital in London, provided important archival references for my painting of the discoverer of penicillin.
My astute editor at Crown, Michelle Frey, ensured that my manuscript for Outbreak was on track, on target, and on time. Her ideas were invaluable, including the title. Alison Kolani was the eagle-eyed copy editor who helped me keep my spelling and facts straight. Jason Zamajtuk designed the crisp, clean look of the book under the gentle supervision of Isabel Warren-Lynch, Crown’s art director.
Finally, Outbreak could not have been created without the members of my family, who were unfailingly supportive and helpful at every turn.
To all of you: thank you.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
The Invisible Hand
Smithereens
Empires of Infection
The Cost of Doing Business
Harsh Teacher
Dying Hope
Purple Death Watch
Racing with the Red Queen
Glossary
Sources
About the Author
Invaders within
You’re born pristine and alone, but it doesn’t last. With your first independent breath, your body becomes a cooperative venture with other creatures: a colony, a host. You become infected.
The creatures that invade your body are called microbes. Invisible to the eye, so small they have to be measured in millionths of a meter, these tiny organisms are mostly single-celled bacteria. They arrive via the air you breathe, the water you drink, the surfaces you touch, and the food you eat. They colonize your skin, your hair, your mouth, your eyes, your ears, and your intestines. By the time you’re an adult, you’ll be carrying around about two pounds of these creatures, mostly in your gut. In sheer numbers, they’ll make up 95 percent of all the cells in your body, about ten quadrillion in all.
This is a good thing. These microbes are symbionts. Our survival depends on cooperative coexistence with them. Symbionts exist with us in a mutually beneficial relationship. We give them protection and nourishment. They keep our bodily ecology in balance. Outside, symbionts keep our skin tidy, our eyelashes groomed, our armpits from rotting. Inside, symbionts help digest food, produce essential vitamins, and protect us from disease. We couldn’t stay healthy without them.
Lifestyles of the small and deadly
Many microbes are not symbionts. Some are free-living creatures like us. They putter around the soil, the forest floor, the oceans and streams, our kitchen countertops and toilets. Others inhabit environments too extreme for most other living things: polar wastes, volcanic vents, nuclear reactors, chemical soups. They live, reproduce, and die on their own, doing us no harm.
The majority of microbes, however, are neither helpful nor benign, neither symbiotic nor free-living. They are parasites. They live in us or on us at our expense. The original parasites were people and the term wasn’t an insult. In ancient Greece, parasites were religious workers who served at temple feasts (parasite means “beside food”). Over the centuries, however, the term changed to describe a professional dinner guest who flattered or amused the host. Eventually parasite came to mean any creature who takes without giving. In the case of microbial parasites, we are the feasts. Sometimes they only steal a little of our food or energy. Sometimes they alter our lifestyle to ensure their survival. Sometimes they make us get sick or die. Microbial parasites include both bacteria and more complex one-celled creatures called protozoans, plus multicelled worms and flukes. They also include viruses, vanishingly small creatures that are neither living nor dead. Viruses invade our bodies and replicate, using our cells as fuel and housing.
All these parasitic microbes are the unseen part of a much larger visible parasitic world that includes mosquitoes, ticks, leeches, and many kinds of worms. Parasitism, it turns out, is an astonishingly popular lifestyle. There are four times as many kinds of parasites on earth as free-livers. Most free-living organisms host several parasites. Many parasites host other parasites. And some of those parasites have parasites of their own. They divide and subdivide the delectable, concentrated food supply of their hosts into precisely defined real estate and fiercely defended turf.
Sick society
Microbial parasites can change not just individuals but entire societies. If enough people live closely together and other conditions are right, an infectious microbe—a pathogen—can spread widely through a population. These are called epidemics and are as old as civilization. One famous Chinese catalog of epidemics lists some 304, starting in 243 B.C. and ending in A.D. 1911. Some epidemics race through populations like summer brush fires, consuming all they touch in a few months, then burning themselves out and disappearing until another season. Others move like glaciers, carving their way through a population over decades. If the disease is particularly successful, becoming continental or global in
scope, it’s called a pandemic. If the pathogen settles in and becomes a permanent feature of a region, it is known as endemic.
But whether fast or slow, epidemic, pandemic, or endemic, these infectious diseases can force enormous, sometimes cataclysmic changes on societies. They can reshuffle power, serve the greater good, or solidify the status of the ruling class. They can determine not just who lives and who dies, but who wins and who loses, who gets wealthy and who stays poor, which ideas become popular and which ones wither away. Without epidemics, ours would be a very different world indeed.
Outbreak is the story of epidemics that have transformed human society. Of the thousands of epidemics that have occurred across human history, this book focuses on six of the most extraordinary: bubonic plague, smallpox, tuberculosis, cholera, yellow fever, and influenza. (Other epidemics, like AIDS, are supporting cast members.) Each chapter describes the origin of the pathogen, its spread, its treatment and cures, and its most influential outbreak. Many of these pathogens have been some of the most feared killers on the planet. Some still are. All have been crucial in changing the way we think and act.
The truth is tiny
Looking at how diseases have changed society tells us a lot about how science has evolved, too. Humanity’s understanding of the role of microbes in the spread of illness has been a slow, halting, convoluted journey of discovery. Along the way we’ve taken many wrong turns, traveled up many box canyons, been led down many blind alleys.
It took thousands of men and women working over many centuries to uncover the simple truths about infection we take for granted today. Of the many important names in the history of epidemics, a few stand out. First in line is an Italian physician, Girolamo Fracastoro, who in the early 1500s guessed that tiny, unseen seminaria contagium (seeds of contagion) might spread disease. More famous is the Dutch cloth merchant and amateur lens grinder Antoni van Leeuwenhoek. In 1674, with his own homemade microscope, he became the first person to see and describe microbes, the first person to truly comprehend the existence of this previously invisible world. He called these new creatures animalcules. But he did not link them to disease.
Antoni van Leeuwenhoek was the first person to see and describe bacteria.
Two centuries after Leeuwenhoek, people still didn’t think microbes caused sickness. They knew microbes existed. They knew they were present on wounds and other injury sites. But microbes were perceived as a by-product of illness. By 1865, French chemist Louis Pasteur had made the critical breakthrough: he proved that microbes actually cause infection. He called them germs. Pasteur’s “germ theory of disease” opened the doors to understanding how illnesses are contracted and spread. His method of killing pathogens with heat—pasteurization—is still used to make many foods safe to consume. By 1884, Pasteur’s German rival, Robert Koch, had developed a method for testing the microbe-disease connection. His Koch Postulates are still the gold standard for determining whether a microbe causes illness.
Over the decades that followed, the competition between Koch, Pasteur, their students, and their rivals unraveled the mysteries of one infectious disease after another. The thresholds these explorers crossed made it possible for their successors to produce today’s medical miracles: antibiotics and vaccines, organ transplants and gene therapy, low infant mortality and high population growth. Slowly, scientist by scientist, revelation by revelation, the veil was lifted and our perception of pathogens changed. Looking for the invisible hand guiding our destiny? You can track it in the economy, find it in holy scripture, or sense it in the grand sweep of the stars. But there’s another truth, a different truth, a smaller truth. It’s closer than you think. Just look in a microscope.
End times
Great epidemics, like wars, natural disasters, and other catastrophes, can expose the fragility of human society. Given enough stress, what seems the most solid and immobile social system can shatter. Such was the case in fourteenth-century Europe, a frozen society built on vast inequality and limited social mobility. For nearly a thousand years, Europeans were held in the rigid, unyielding grip of two interconnected forces: the feudal aristocracy and the Catholic Church. A third group, the knights, enforced their will. These power centers controlled all the wealth, owned all the land, determined all the laws, and were gatekeepers of all knowledge. They ruled over a body of ill-paid, ill-housed, illiterate peasant serfs, who did the work. Compared to competing regions like the inquisitive and inventive realm of golden age Islam or the continent-spanning empire of the Mongols, Europe was a Podunk backwater.
The arrival in 1346 of a new disease changed this situation. Arcing across Europe from the Medi-terranean to Scandinavia, the epidemic caused victims to become feverish and grow painful black welts that exuded a nauseating stench. Half who were sickened by the illness died. Europeans called it the Great Mortality, the Pestilence, and the Pest. We call it the Black Death. In four years, it destroyed a third of Europe’s population. Afterward, nothing in Europe was quite the same. The entire structure of European society became more porous, more mobile. With fewer workers, wages went up. With fewer consumers, prices went down. In both the countryside and the cities, a rising middle class was able to accumulate, at bargain prices, the land, businesses, and wealth the dead had left behind. This economic revolution in turn sparked other changes: in law (to make sense of the new order), in the arts (to reflect on the horror and show off the new money), and in trade (to accumulate even more). In the Church, the catastrophe smashed an ossified orthodoxy, leading to questions, inventions, heresy, wars, and ultimately a world with not one Christianity but many. Finally, in the world of the nobility, the social, economic, and political crises caused by the Black Death were blows from which the ruling classes never fully recovered. Bit by bit, their power seeped away to others, never to return.
Keep the faith
Even before the arrival of the Black Death, Europe was heading for a brick wall of trouble. By the beginning of the fourteenth century, the population had grown to an unprecedented seventy-three million. Cities were crowded and filthy, filled with people who hardly ever bathed. Sewerage was inadequate, so rotting garbage and human waste were heaped in streets or dumped in rivers. Moreover, around 1280, the climate had begun cooling. Summers became shorter, winters harsher, and harvests worse. Nearly all the forests had been cut down. No more farmland was available. People began to starve. Pessimism and persecution grew.
Adaptation to changing conditions was difficult, for the Church discouraged innovation and independent ideas. Priests enforced unswerving loyalty to the Pope and belief in orthodox Christian dogma. This included the conviction that we were born with original sin and lived cursed. Illness, like all of life’s troubles, was the result of sin. Christians dared not waver from these teachings. They risked excommunication or worse.
Medical knowledge had also stalled. Since 1300, Pope Boniface VIII had forbidden the dissection of human cadavers (pigs were used instead). Human anatomy remained a mystery. The function of many organs, even the circulation of the blood, was unknown. Physicians continued to depend on the thousand-year-old teachings of the fifth-century-B.C. Greek physician Hippocrates and his second-century-A.D. Roman follower Galen. These two influential doctors believed that illness was caused by an imbalance in bodily “humors.” An excess of hot blood, for example, was thought to cause fever. It was curable by phlebotomy: bloodletting. This approach to human health would prove utterly useless in combating the plague. Physicians did their best with the tools at their disposal, but for the most part they could only watch helplessly as their patients died.
To protect themselves from the Black Death, physicians wore a special outfit: a waxed-linen robe, a wide-brimmed hat, gloves, and a mask that featured glass lenses and a long beak filled with vinegar-soaked cloth and spices to counteract the stench of dying patients. Their preferred way of trying to cure patients was by bleeding them.
Germ warfare
The Black Death probably started in 1331
in Central Asia, carried there by infected Mongol troops returning from Burma. By 1346, having killed millions and traveled with armies and traders along the Silk Road, the epidemic arrived on the Black Sea’s Crimean Peninsula. There a Tartar army was besieging the city of Kaffa. To break the city’s defenses, the attackers catapulted diseased corpses over the walls. Genoese merchants trading there fled via ship to Messina, Sicily. Sick and dying, they arrived in October 1347, bringing plague to the Italian peninsula.
Nearly everywhere the plague reached, victims died faster than they could be buried. In Pisa, five hundred people a day died. In Paris, eight hundred a day died. In Vienna, six hundred a day died. In Avignon, when the graveyards were filled, corpses were dumped in the Rhône River. In Bordeaux, rotting cadavers were stacked on the docks and in the streets. By December 1348, the epidemic arrived in England. Bodies there overflowed mass graves. It soon spread to Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Prussia, Iceland, and even distant Greenland. In 1351, when the epidemic seemed to be finally over, officials of Pope Clement VI estimated that 23,840,000 people were gone. Nearly a third of Europe’s population had been killed by the disease.
Deadly diseases for $100
What was the Black Death? The most common explanation for the epidemic is bubonic plague, a disease passed to people by rodents. Historically, plague had been confined to populations of rats in isolated mountain regions, one in South Asia and the other in East Africa. When human activities like war and trade disturbed these ancient reservoirs, the plague escaped its natural confines. The devastating Justinian’s Plague that hit the Mediterranean in A.D. 542 was likely bubonic, imported by Roman soldiers returning from Ethiopia. The Roman Empire never recovered, and European power shifted north; a century later, Islam became the predominant civilization of the eastern Mediterranean. The World Health Organization calls this the first plague pandemic. The Black Death was the beginning of the second. In all, that second pandemic lasted over three hundred years. Plague returned several times in the 1500s, struck London in the Great Plague of 1664–66, and finally sputtered out in the 1750s.