Wednesday, January 31, 2018

EPIDEMICS

It is winter in Northeast Ohio and that means the flu is in full force.

Is it an epidemic?

According to Dictionary.com an epidemic is: "a temporary prevalence of a disease."

In the United States, the Center for Disease Control (CDC) 
decides if a disease has reached epidemic proportions.

On January 12th, the CDC declared that flu had reached epidemic level in the U.S.




Flu activity from the Center for Disease Control
dated 20 January 2018.


While a major inconvenience to many of us, the flu will prove fatal to some. 
In today's Medina Gazette, the Medina Health Department said there have been 10 deaths due to the flu, so far this season.

Which leads us to epidemics of the past.

Most of us have wandered the rows in cemeteries and paused when we see family members who have all died around the same date. "What happened here?", we wonder.

Oftentimes, what has happened is an epidemic.

Epidemics have been around for millennia. This Wikipedia article traces epidemics back to the 5th century, B.C. 

Since most of us cannot trace our ancestry back that far, today we will look at the epidemics that have plagued Medina County in the last 200 years.

MEDINA EPIDEMICS


 1833-34 Asiatic Cholera - It is thought that it arrived from Europe with immigrants. Rufus Ferris died as a result of trying to bring treatment to prisoners at the Ohio Penitentiary.
1839-40 Dysentery - this is extreme diarrhea caused by eating contaminated food or water. Often caused by inadequate sanitary conditions around outdoor toilets.
1853-54 Dysentery
1852 - Small Pox
1855 - Variolia *(Small Pox)
1843-44 Malignant Erysipelas* This disease afflicted Wadsworth Township people very hard.
1848 - Malignant Erysipelas*
1850 - Measles (from mortality schedule)
1859 - Diptheria
1863-65 - Cerebro-spinal meningitis
1900-1915 – Typhoid Mary  - Luckily, Mary did not work or travel further east than New York. But hers is an interesting case to look at.

Mary Mallon, also known as "Typhoid Mary" carried typhoid fever 
wherever she worked as a cook. Once she was identified as the carrier,
she refused to stop working and changed her name. She probably
infected hundreds and caused the death of as many as 50 people.
Only once she was quarantined did she stop infecting people.
Photo courtesy of WikiCommons.

1916 - Polio
1918-1919 - Spanish Flu - Started during World War I and spread quickly by troop movements. Had a devastating impact on everyone.

Medina Gazette article from 18 October 1918 showing three Medina soldiers deaths from Spanish Flu.
Schools closed and businesses shut. Even the draft board suspended the draft until "the epidemic has been stamped out."




1952 – Polio
1962-1965 – Measles
Nowadays, an epidemic often results in the development of a vaccine. As this 1969 Gazette  article shows, it can take years to create the cure.

Medina County Gazette 19 August 1969, page 2.

1981- Present – AIDS
1989-1991 - Measles
2009 - H1N1 virus
        
*Variolia is another name for small pox and erysipelas is a contagious skin infection.

Luckily, with modern sanitation and the use of antibiotics, many of the above listed diseases are things of the past.
          



SOURCES:

FLU MAPS Center for Disease Control
Ohio History Central
Cleveland Influenza
Cholera
History of Medina County and Ohio  (1881)

3 comments:

  1. Hi Kathy!
    I was just watching a video about diseases being trapped in permafrost, a lot of which is now melting. They found that in one area, a creature's body had been trapped under a layer of ice, which preserved the disease that killed it, Anthrax. Once its body was exposed again it infected an entire herd. I can't remember if it was a deer or an antelope, but it is interesting to think that maybe a lot of bacteria and viruses have been trapped in frozen soil and may be reentering our environment.

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  2. What a creepy and scary thought! Where can I access the video? Inquiring minds want to know! LOL!

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    1. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=1236888083087888&id=720610231382345
      Here's the link!

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