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Pandemics and Infectious Diseases. Try to guess…what are the top 10 causes of death worldwide. 10. Hypertension (2% of all deaths) 9. Vehicular Accidents (2.2% of all deaths) 8. Diabetes (2.7% of all deaths) 7. Diarrhea (2.7% of all deaths) 6. HIV & AIDS (2.7% of all deaths)
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Try to guess…what are the top 10 causes of death worldwide 10. Hypertension (2% of all deaths) 9. Vehicular Accidents (2.2% of all deaths) 8. Diabetes (2.7% of all deaths) 7. Diarrhea (2.7% of all deaths) 6. HIV & AIDS (2.7% of all deaths) 5. Lung, Tracheal, & Bronchial Cancers (2.9% of all deaths) 4. Lower Respiratory Infections (5.5% of all deaths) includes pneumonia, tuberculosis, influenza, bronchitis, etc 3. COPD – Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (5.6% of all deaths) 2. Stroke (11.9% of all deaths) 1. Coronary Heart Disease (13.2% of all deaths)
Causes of death in the developed world • Many of the same causes, Heart Disease is still #1 • But there’s no Diarrhea in the Top 10, or HIV/AIDS, • There is Suicide, Alzheimers, Kidney Disease
What is “Medical Geography”? • Study of the interconnections between population, health and the environment • Cause and diffusion of disease • Provision and consumption of health care • Social construction of health • Effects of environmental change
Some Terms To Know • If a disease is epidemic, ….. there are numerous outbreaks and the situation gets more serious. • If a disease is pandemic, ….. this is a serious situation and it means that it has spread globally.
Bacterial, parasitic, or viral? • Bacterial: a disease caused by bacteria, it is alive and so can be killed by antibiotics • Viral: a disease caused by a virus, its symptoms can be alleviated but it can’t be cured, it is not “alive” so can’t be killed • Parasitic: a disease caused by a parasite (tiny bug or worm)
Cause and Spread of Disease • In 1854 London, England there was a Cholera outbreak where 616 people died • At the time they thought it might be spread by inhaling infected air or eating contaminated food
Dr. John Snow (yes, really) used a dot map to map the addresses of cholera victims and the location of water pumps they used • Discovered that most of the cholera victims lived around one pump that was contaminated • Most famous and earliest case of geography and maps being utilized to understand the spread of a disease • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1jlsyucUwpo
Cholera Deaths • Cholera deaths result from severe dehydration caused by diarrhea • This is treatable; in 2004 only 2.5% of cholera cases were fatal
Epidemiology • : the branch of medicine that deals with the incidence, distribution, and control of disease
Epidemiologic Transition Theory Why do some regions face health threats? • Each stage of the demographic transition model has distinctive causes of death • The leading causes of death change from infectious to degenerative types as the demographic transition occurs.
Epidemiologic Transition Stage 1 Death because of: • Infectious and parasitic diseases (Black Death) • Nutritional deficiencies • Death by animal attacks • Accidents • Killed by other people • High Birth Rate • High Death Rate • Slow population growth • Happens in very poor, isolated places
Plague • This disease has changed the course of human history • Caused by a bacteria transmitted to humans by fleas from infected rats • There are several types but the most famous is the Bubonic Plague • Named after the hard swollen “buboes” or lumps that develop near the flea bite
More Plague • Bubonic plague killed 60%, but some other forms of Plague killed 90% of its victims • When the rats start dying off, the fleas find human hosts • The first incident of this kind of plague was in the years 541-544 when it spread from Egypt to Europe and killed ¼ of Mediterranean Europe and helped in the downfall of the Roman Empire
Plague as Biological Weapon • During various Medieval wars, armies would use plague-infected bodies as biological weapons • They would use them to contaminate enemy’s water supply • Or they would catapult the bodies into the cities during a siege • During WW2 the Japanese used it on Chinese soldiers
Plague still exists • Today there are antibiotics and a vaccine but there are still pockets where it survives
River Blindness • Onchocerciasis (River Blindness): a disease caused by infection with the parasitic worm • It is the second most common cause of blindness due to infection • 17-25 million people are infected • Most infections occur in sub-Saharan Africa, although cases have also been reported in Yemen and isolated areas of Central and South America.
Epidemiologic Transition Stage 2 • Death caused by receding pandemics – cholera, tuberculosis, typhus, yellow fever • High birth rate • Death rate starts to drop due to advancements in healthcare and sanitation • Rapid population growth • Late 19th century Europe and America; or current Kenya, Egypt
1918 Influenza outbreak • It infected 500 million people • It killed 50 - 100 million of them—3-5% of the world's population • One of the deadliest natural disasters in human history • Most flu outbreaks kill young, elderly, or already weakened patients • In contrast this flu killed mostly healthy young adults
Spanish Flu • To maintain morale, wartime censors minimized early reports of illness the USA and most of allied Europe • But papers were free to report the epidemic's effects in neutral Spain • This created a false impression of Spain as especially hard hit— thus the nickname
How Did It Spread • Modern transportation made it easier for soldiers, sailors, and travelers to spread the disease. • In the USA, the disease was first observed in January 1918 • It struck every corner of the globe • In Canada 50,000 died • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rbYwNOcKqqc
Epidemiologic Transition Stage 3 Death caused by Degenerative Diseases • Decrease in deaths from infectious diseases (vaccines) • Increase of chronic disorders associated with aging e.g. heart attacks &cancer • Death rates still dropping • Birth rates also now start to drop • Rapid growth still • Happens in places like Brazil
Anti-Vax leads to Measles Outbreaks • Measles was considered eliminated from the USA in 2000 • But now with the anti-vaccination movement, it’s come back • It’s extremely contagious, airborne, and can be deadly • Preventable through immunization
Epidemiologic Transition Stage 4 Death caused by Delayed Degenerative Diseases • Cancer and heart disease • Tobacco, alcohol, poor diet, lack of exercise • Birth rate and death rates stabilize • Slow population growth
Epidemiological Transition Stage 5 • Death caused by new diseases, and same reasons as Stage 4 • Some infectious diseases have evolved and returned • New diseases have emerged • New strains of viruses & bacteria are drug resistant • Most people can’t afford new drugs
Malaria • Nearly eradicated in 1950s by spraying DDT in areas infested with the mosquito that carried the parasite. • Returned after 1963 with the evolution of DDT-resistant mosquitos
Smallpox • An infectious viral disease • Originally known as the "pox” or "red plague” • It killed millions in the 18th-20th centuries • It killed 20-60% of victims (80% of infected children) • After a vaccine was developed, the disease was eradicated in 1979
Syphilis • A bacterial infection transmitted through sexual contact • 12 million people infected in 1999, with greater than 90% of cases in the developing world • Called the ‘French disease’ or ‘the Great Pox’
Polio • An infectious viral disease • Often causes paralysis of the legs • One of the most dreaded childhood diseases of the 20th century • A vaccine was developed in the 1950s • Now less than a thousand people have it
HIV/ AIDS • Infection rates are as high as 25% in southern and eastern Africa. • In 2006 the HIV prevalence rate among pregnant women in South Africa was 29%. • By 2025 AIDS could kill 31 million people in India, 18 million in China, and 90–100 million in Africa.
Ebola • Ebola hemorrhagic fever (EHF): a viral hemorrhagic fever • The largest outbreak to date was the epidemic in West Africa in 2013-2016 with 11,310 deaths • It was declared no longer an emergency in March 2016 • The disease kills between 25 -90% of those infected • The virus spreads through bodily fluids
New Pandemics • SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome): a viral respiratory disease • In 2002-2003, an outbreak of SARS in southern China caused an eventual 8,098 cases, resulting in 774 deaths reported in 37 countries. No cases of SARS have been reported worldwide since 2004. • H1N1(swine flu): a subtype of the influenza virus • In June 2009, the World Health Organization declared the new strain of swine-origin H1N1 as a pandemic. • This novel virus spread worldwide and had caused about 17,000 deaths by the start of 2010. In August, the World Health Organization declared the H1N1 influenza pandemic over
Antibiotic-resistant superbugs • These are new mutations that are immune to antibiotics • Some of the most concerning strains include CRE, MRSA, and C. difficile • Each of these superbugs are potentially fatal • Most of these strains are acquired in hospital settings
Barriers to Spread of Disease Natural physical barriers Human measures Immigration policy Closing international borders Isolation Hand washing Cancel public events • Mountainous areas • Extreme climate regions • Oceans
Play Solve the Outbreak • This is available as an app or you can just play it on the CDC (Centre for Disease Control) website • https://www.cdc.gov/mobile/applications/sto/web-app.html