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9. Asiatic Cholera (I): Personal Reflections

2 Views· 03 Sep 2019
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Epidemics in Western Society Since 1600 (HIST 234)

Professor Snowden describes the historical detective work that went into the research and writing of Naples in the Time of Cholera, his study of the 1884 and 1911 epidemics of Asiatic cholera that struck Italy. The latter epidemic is of particular interest, because the official historiography of the disease has long confined its outbreaks in Western Europe to the nineteenth century. Through his investigation, Snowden discovered that there was in fact an epidemic on Italian shores in 1911, and that its absence from subsequent histories was the result of concerted efforts of concealment on the part of Italian and U.S. authorities. The story of this successful concealment sheds light not only on the history of Asiatic cholera in the early twentieth century, but also on more recent public health campaigns that have involved concealment, such as China's response to the 2002 SARS epidemic.

00:00 - Chapter 1. Asiatic Cholera in Naples in 1911
06:22 - Chapter 2. Concealment?
13:27 - Chapter 3. Search for Evidence
21:05 - Chapter 4. Advances in Cholera Therapeutics
27:39 - Chapter 5. Concealment in Conflict with Patient Care
33:49 - Chapter 6. Why Conceal?
44:59 - Chapter 7. Effects of Concealment

Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses

This course was recorded in Spring 2010.

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