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Barrett et al. 1998

Introduction

  • Emerging infectious diseases: seen as a big problem currently

  • Emerging infections: are not a recent phenomenon but have always played a major role throughout human history

  • 3 epidemiologic transitions

  • Importance of anthropology for research

An Overview of Epidemiological Transitions

  • Omran’s model criticisms

    • Implies each stage of the transition is more advanced and desirable than the previous stages

    • Using whole nations as units of analysis: buries the differential experience according to race, gender, and class

    • Restricted to a particular set of historical circumstances in the recent shift

Epidemiological Transitions: From the Late Paleolithic Age to the Industrial Revolution

Paleolithic Age Baseline

  • Populations were too small and dispersed to support communicable pathogens

  • Pinworm

  • Ectoparasites

  • Enteric pathogens

  • Rate of emergence of diseases: may have increased as tool use allowed exploitation of novel ecological niches and as migration increased

The First Epidemiologic Transition

  • Sedentism: led to larger groups + more interaction between people

  • Increase in infectious disease mortality

  • Accumulation of human waste

  • Appearance of domesticated animals: provided a reservoir for zoonoses

  • Agricultural practices

  • Nutrient deficiencies

  • Groups that most suffered: women, children, lower classes

  • Increased severity of diseases

  • Crowding in urban centers

  • Epidemic outbreaks

  • Increasing migration + trade: transmission of diseases

  • Exploration + conquest: infections of Native Americans leading to pandemics

The Second Epidemiologic Transition

  • Industrial Revolution

  • Decline in infectious disease mortality within developed countries

    • Landmark for modernization

  • Nutritional factors

  • Extension of life expectancy: increased morbidity from chronic diseases

    • Cancer, diabetes, etc.

  • Increasing of water + air pollution

  • Differences in mortality based on social inequalities

  • Improvements in child survival and life expectancy at birth in less developed nations

    • Immunizations + antibiotics

The Third Epidemiologic Transition

  • Emerging infectious diseases

  • New diseases: contribute to adult mortality

  • Increased incidence and prevalence of pre-existing infectious diseases that were thought to be under control

  • Generation of antimicrobial-resistant strains at a faster rate than safe new drugs is developed

Recently Emerging Infections

  • 29 newly emerged pathogens since 1973

    • May be due to increases in detection rates

  • Examples: HIV, Ebola, Marburg, Lyme disease, dengue fever, malaria, tuberculosis

    • Earlier transmission of HIV to urban Haiti: by more affluent Westerns engaging in sex tourism

  • These new outbreaks are linked to climatic fluctuations and ecological disruptions

  • Re-emerging infections causes: warmer climates, climatic fluctuations, poorly developed urban environments, increase in mosquito populations, decreases public health expenditures, poverty,

  • Inevitability of genetic adaptations of microorganisms to the selective conditions posed by human technology and behaviors

  • Host susceptibility and comorbidity

  • Overuse of antibiotics in industrial animal: causes the rise of multi-drug resistant strains of food-borne pathogens

  • Human populations are converging into a single global disease ecology

C

Barrett et al. 1998

Introduction

  • Emerging infectious diseases: seen as a big problem currently

  • Emerging infections: are not a recent phenomenon but have always played a major role throughout human history

  • 3 epidemiologic transitions

  • Importance of anthropology for research

An Overview of Epidemiological Transitions

  • Omran’s model criticisms

    • Implies each stage of the transition is more advanced and desirable than the previous stages

    • Using whole nations as units of analysis: buries the differential experience according to race, gender, and class

    • Restricted to a particular set of historical circumstances in the recent shift

Epidemiological Transitions: From the Late Paleolithic Age to the Industrial Revolution

Paleolithic Age Baseline

  • Populations were too small and dispersed to support communicable pathogens

  • Pinworm

  • Ectoparasites

  • Enteric pathogens

  • Rate of emergence of diseases: may have increased as tool use allowed exploitation of novel ecological niches and as migration increased

The First Epidemiologic Transition

  • Sedentism: led to larger groups + more interaction between people

  • Increase in infectious disease mortality

  • Accumulation of human waste

  • Appearance of domesticated animals: provided a reservoir for zoonoses

  • Agricultural practices

  • Nutrient deficiencies

  • Groups that most suffered: women, children, lower classes

  • Increased severity of diseases

  • Crowding in urban centers

  • Epidemic outbreaks

  • Increasing migration + trade: transmission of diseases

  • Exploration + conquest: infections of Native Americans leading to pandemics

The Second Epidemiologic Transition

  • Industrial Revolution

  • Decline in infectious disease mortality within developed countries

    • Landmark for modernization

  • Nutritional factors

  • Extension of life expectancy: increased morbidity from chronic diseases

    • Cancer, diabetes, etc.

  • Increasing of water + air pollution

  • Differences in mortality based on social inequalities

  • Improvements in child survival and life expectancy at birth in less developed nations

    • Immunizations + antibiotics

The Third Epidemiologic Transition

  • Emerging infectious diseases

  • New diseases: contribute to adult mortality

  • Increased incidence and prevalence of pre-existing infectious diseases that were thought to be under control

  • Generation of antimicrobial-resistant strains at a faster rate than safe new drugs is developed

Recently Emerging Infections

  • 29 newly emerged pathogens since 1973

    • May be due to increases in detection rates

  • Examples: HIV, Ebola, Marburg, Lyme disease, dengue fever, malaria, tuberculosis

    • Earlier transmission of HIV to urban Haiti: by more affluent Westerns engaging in sex tourism

  • These new outbreaks are linked to climatic fluctuations and ecological disruptions

  • Re-emerging infections causes: warmer climates, climatic fluctuations, poorly developed urban environments, increase in mosquito populations, decreases public health expenditures, poverty,

  • Inevitability of genetic adaptations of microorganisms to the selective conditions posed by human technology and behaviors

  • Host susceptibility and comorbidity

  • Overuse of antibiotics in industrial animal: causes the rise of multi-drug resistant strains of food-borne pathogens

  • Human populations are converging into a single global disease ecology