Third Pandemic

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    Great pandemics and epidemics have occurred all throughout our world’s history. They have destroyed civilizations, devastated families, and took away innocent people’s lives. A pandemic refers to a spread of a highly infectious disease usually worldwide, while on the other hand; epidemics are much more contained and can permanently damage a city. Two of the most well known, and most deadly viruses that are around today are the Influenza and Ebola viruses. Both of these viruses have proven…

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    Plague Breakout

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    Most people have heard of the devastating dark ages event, the Black Death. This breakout caused the largest biochemical disaster known to mankind. The bacteria that caused the black plague is known as Yersinia pestis, and continues to exist even today. At the time when the original plague broke out, lack of medicine, and other sanitary needs greatly affected how quickly the plague was able to spread. Although the overall period of time is mostly considered to be the breakout of one common…

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    trade happend because people were fearful to trade goods with a country that was infected with the plague. All of these factors contributed to Europe’s period of reduced prosperity. During the middle ages, the plague was known as all destroying. One third of a country's population cannot be eliminated over a period of three years without considerable dislocation to its’ economy, Church life, and family life. Through these losses, Europe’s social structure and altered medieval society…

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    Unintended Consequences of the Columbian Exchange was the diseases that the Europeans brought over to the new world. Such ass smallpox and measles. The Native American people have never been exposed to any such disease. The native American had no immunity whatsoever and absolutely no medicine to treat for smallpox or measles. Illnesses that were mostly common to the people and sometimes treatable in Europe totally ravaged the population. Smallpox was the worst by far, the disease spread like…

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    The Black Death “was probably the greatest public health disaster in recorded history.”(449) It spread across the Eurasian continent and in parts of Africa in the 1340’s, killing and estimated 70 million people and over 60% of the European population. It was used as the first ever form of biological warfare by the Mongols. Three Authors named Gabriele de’ Mussis, Giovanni Boccaccio, and Ahmad al-Maqrizi wrote about their first and second hand accounts of the decease; and how it affected people…

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    Disease In The Ghost Map

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    The Ghost Map by Steven Johnson is a true story of a terrifying outbreak of cholera and how Dr. John Snow and reverend Henry Whitehead used their knowledge of the disease to find out how prevalent it was over the whole city of London. The disease may have been unfamiliar to them, but common to the millions of people around the country, whose living conditions and sanitation processes were not as good or advanced as theirs. The story reflects the world through the wide varieties of disciplines,…

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    In his “The Tipping Point”, with the help of various illustrations, Gladwell points out how things become epidemic and how little things make big differences in social realities. Reading “The Law of the Few” made me think about how ideas and behavior can spread like diseases or viruses. Also, the book made me think of life as an epidemic. As far as I understand, one of the reasons why Gladwell brings examples of epidemics and viruses is that a lot of things in life, such as ideas, behavior and…

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    Saint Catherine of Siena was a very unknown woman of her time until certain events happened. Catherine was so persuasive and influential that she ended a conflict in France, in the fourteenth century, which was a relief for everyone. She was known as a visionary and a mystic, and she was declared Doctor of the Church because she loved to soothe and heal people in any religious and non harmful way. Even though Catherine always showed love and devotion to everyone, not everyone was happy about…

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    Ghost Map Essay

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    Reflection Paper on Ghost Map John Snow is recognized as one of the founding fathers of modern epidemiology. In Ghost Map, it gives the details of John Snow’s efforts to discover that cholera was a water-borne illness. What John Snow did differently was he mapped the cases, and the map essentially represented each death as a bar. On the Broad Street pump, which was free, public source of drinking water for a long time, it located a well beneath Golden Square, to some of London’s poorest and…

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    In the fourteenth century, the Black Death stood out as the most emotional and way of life changing occasion during this century. This death caused one third of all the people in Europe to be killed. This shocking population change coming into the Late Middle Ages brought on extraordinary changes in European society and way of life. This plague had three different ways that would affect your body and maybe just your entire life if you were lucky. There was the bubonic variant, which were…

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