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“Stay alert, infodemic, Black Death: the fascinating origins of pandemic terms - The Conversation UK” plus 1 more
“Stay alert, infodemic, Black Death: the fascinating origins of pandemic terms - The Conversation UK” plus 1 more |
Stay alert, infodemic, Black Death: the fascinating origins of pandemic terms - The Conversation UK Posted: 14 May 2020 12:00 AM PDT Language always tells a story. As COVID-19 shakes the world, many of the words we're using to describe it originated during earlier calamities – and have colourful tales behind them. In the Middle Ages, for example, fast-spreading infectious diseases were known as plagues – as in the Bubonic plague, named for the characteristic swellings (or buboes) that appear in the groin or armpit. With its origins in the Latin word plaga meaning "stroke" or "wound", plague came to refer to a wider scourge through its use to describe the ten plagues suffered by the Egyptians in the biblical book of Exodus. Read more: Lost in translation: five common English phrases you may be using incorrectly An alternative term, pestilence, derives from Latin pestis ("plague"), which is also the origin of French peste, the title of the 1947 novel by Albert Camus (La Peste, or The Plague) which has soared up the bestseller charts in recent weeks. Latin pestis also gives us pest, now used to describe animals that destroy crops, or any general nuisance or irritant. Indeed, the bacterium that causes Bubonic plague is called Yersinia pestis. The Bubonic plague outbreak of the 14th century was also known as the Great Mortality or the Great Death. The Black Death, which is now most widely used to describe that catastrophe, is, in fact, a 17th-century translation of a Danish name for the disease: "Den Sorte Død". Snake venom, the original 'virus'The later plagues of the 17th century led to the coining of the word epidemic. This came from a Greek word meaning "prevalent", from epi "upon" and demos "people". The more severe pandemic is so called because it affects everyone (from Greek pan "all"). A more recent coinage, infodemic, a blend of info and epidemic, was introduced in 2003 to refer to the deluge of misinformation and fake news that accompanied the outbreak of SARS (an acronym formed from the initial letters of "severe acute respiratory syndrome"). The 17th-century equivalent of social distancing was "avoiding someone like the plague". According to Samuel Pepys's account of the outbreak that ravaged London in 1665, infected houses were marked with a red cross and had the words "Lord have mercy upon us" inscribed on the doors. Best to avoid properties so marked. The current pandemic, COVID-19, is a contracted form of Coronavirus disease 2019. The term for this genus of viruses was coined in 1968 and referred to their appearance under the microscope, which reveals a distinctive halo or crown (Latin corona). Virus comes from a Latin word meaning "poison", first used in English to describe a snake's venom. The race to find a vaccine has focused on the team at Oxford University's Jenner Institute, named for Edward Jenner (1749-1823). It was his discovery that contact with cowpox resulted in milkmaids becoming immune to the more severe strain found in smallpox. This discovery is behind the term vaccine (from the Latin vacca "cow") which gives individuals immunity (originally a term certifying exemption from public service). Inoculation was initially a horticultural term describing the grafting of a bud into a plant: from Latin oculus, meaning "bud" as well as "eye" (as in binoculars "having two eyes"). Although we are currently adjusting to social distancing as part of the "new normal", the term itself has been around since the 1950s. It was initially coined by sociologists to describe individuals or groups deliberately adopting a policy of social or emotional detachment. Read more: A history of English ... in five words Its use to refer to a strategy for limiting the spread of a disease goes back to the early 2000s, with reference to outbreaks of flu. Flu is a shortening of influenza, adopted into English from Italian following a major outbreak which began in Italy in 1743. Although it is often called the Spanish flu, the strain that triggered the pandemic of 1918 most likely began elsewhere, although its origins are uncertain. Its name derives from a particularly severe outbreak in Spain. To the watchtowerSelf-isolation, the measure of protection which involves deliberately cutting oneself off from others, is first recorded in the 1830s – isolate goes back to the Latin insulatus "insulated", from insula "island". An extended mode of isolation, known as quarantine, is from the Italian quarantina referring to "40 days". The specific period derives from its original use to refer to the period of fasting in the wilderness undertaken by Jesus in the Christian gospels. Lockdown, the most extreme form of social containment, in which citizens must remain in their homes at all times, comes from its use in prisons to describe a period of extended confinement following a disturbance. Many governments have recently announced a gradual easing of restrictions and a call for citizens to "stay alert". While some have expressed confusion over this message, for etymologists the required response is perfectly clear: we should all take to the nearest tall building, since alert is from the Italian all'erta "to the watchtower". |
From the plague to MERS: A brief history of pandemics - Aljazeera.com Posted: 01 Jun 2020 01:33 AM PDT On March 11, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the new coronavirus - which was first reported in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year - a pandemic. As of May 31, there were more than 6.1 million confirmed cases of COVID-19, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University, while the number of registered deaths worldwide stood at nearly 371,000. To date, there is no vaccine or known treatment for the new coronavirus, officially known as SARS-CoV-2. Some of the most basic defences against it include frequent and thorough handwashing with soap and water, physical distancing and self-isolation. These recommendations have also been the prescribed measures to contain the spread of other highly contagious diseases in the past. The practice of quarantine for contagious diseases was mentioned in the Canon of Medicine written by Persian polymath Ibn Sina (980-1037), better known in the West as Avicenna, and published in 1025. The word quarantine comes from the Italian "quaranta giorni", which translates to 40 days. Here is a brief look at some of those past pandemics. The Plague of Justinian (541-549)Death Toll: Approximately 30-50 million Cause: Bubonic Plague This was the first-ever recorded incident of the plague. Named after the Byzantine emperor, Justinian I, who caught the disease but recovered, it was spread to humans by rodents harbouring fleas that carried the bacterium, Yersinia pestis. The rats travelled on grain ships and in grain carts. As the political and commercial centre of the Byzantine Empire, Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul) was particularly hard hit. According to ancient historians, the pandemic killed up to 10,000 people a day there, although modern historians say the number may have been closer to 5,000. But it was not limited to Constantinople. It spread throughout the empire, facilitated by war and trade, killing nearly 25 percent of the population. It returned every 12 years or so until around 750, eventually wiping out half of Europe's population (around 100 million people). The Black Death (1346-1353)Death Toll: Approximately 75-200 million Cause: Bubonic Plague The Black Death ravaged Europe, Africa and Asia, killing anywhere between 75 million and 200 million people - making it the deadliest disease outbreak in recorded history. Like the Plague of Justinian, it was also caused by the bacterium, Yersinia pestis, carried by rats. Ships carrying the rats enabled it to spread between continents. It was supposedly named the Black Death because of the black spots that formed on the skin of the infected. According to some accounts, the first outbreak of the Black Death in Europe took place in Caffa, on the Crimean Peninsula. In 1346, this important trading post was besieged by the Mongol army, which had conquered lands throughout Asia. Many of the soldiers, however, were infected with the plague. When they succumbed to it, the army catapulted their corpses over the city walls, causing people living inside the city to become infected. The Third Cholera Pandemic (1852-1860)Death Toll: Approximately 1 million Cause: Cholera According to the WHO, there have been seven cholera epidemics. The one that had the greatest global impact was the third, in 1852. It originated in India before spreading through the rest of Asia and parts of Europe, North America and Africa. Cholera is caused by eating food or drinking water contaminated with the bacterium, Vibrio cholera. It can result in acute diarrhoeal disease that can kill within hours if left untreated. According to the WHO, there are still 1.3 million to four million cases of cholera each year, with between 21,000 and 143,000 fatalities. Flu Pandemic (1889-1890)Death Toll: At least 1 million Cause: Influenza A subtype H3N8 Considered the last great pandemic of the 19th century, this particular strain of influenza was known as the "Asiatic Flu" or "Russian Flu", likely because it originated in the Central Asian region of the Russian Empire. The pandemic spread quickly, aided by the existence of modern forms of transport, like railroads, and transatlantic travel by boat. In fact, it took just four months to circle the planet, peaking in the US 70 days after its original peak in St Petersburg. The Sixth Cholera Pandemic (1899-1923)Death Toll: 800,000 Cause: Cholera Cholera went through several surges, and its sixth incarnation in 1910, like the ones before it, originated in India. It killed hundreds of thousands of people before spreading to various parts of the Middle East, North Africa, Europe and Russia. Cholera transmission is closely linked to inadequate access to clean water and sanitation facilities. It takes between 12 hours and five days for a person to show symptoms after consuming contaminated food or water. Flu Pandemic (1918-1919)Death Toll: Approximately 20-100 million Cause: Influenza H1N1- Avian origin The first identified cases of this particular strain of influenza were recorded in the spring of 1918 among US soldiers during WWI, before spreading worldwide and infecting at least one-third of the global population. Although the death toll is unknown, many estimates put it at more than 50 million and some as high as 100 million, making it the deadliest pandemic since the Black Death. In the US, it was dubbed the "Spanish flu", although researchers could not identify the geographical origin of the disease. However, cases of the illness were widely reported in Spain, which was not involved in WWI and therefore, not subjected to war-time news blackouts, possibly creating a false impression that it originated there. What was particularly significant about this outbreak was its effect on healthy adults, unlike prior outbreaks where the immunocompromised and juveniles had been more susceptible. Without any vaccine, this pandemic had two waves. The initial wave being milder than the second. Returning soldiers contributed to the second wave. Communities imposed quarantines, the wearing of masks and bans on public gatherings as a way of combatting the pandemic. It is thought that these measures, combined with people developing immunity to it, helped to end the pandemic, although there is also a theory that the virus mutated rapidly into a less lethal strain, resulting in a sharp drop in infections and deaths. Asian Flu (1956-1958)Death Toll: At least 1.1 million Cause: Influenza A - H2N2 subtype The first case of the Asian Flu was identified in China in 1956. From there, it travelled to Singapore, Hong Kong and the US. There were also reports of it spreading to India in 1957. Studies suggested the pandemic originated from strains of avian and human influenza viruses. Symptoms, which included weakness in the legs, chills, a sore throat, running nose and cough, appeared soon after exposure to the virus. There were two waves of this outbreak, but the spread of the infection slowed following the development of a vaccine in August 1957. Hong Kong Flu Pandemic (1968)Death Toll: Approximately 1 million Cause: Influenza A - H3N2, subtype of H2N2 The first reported case of this pandemic was in July 1968 in Hong Kong. Outbreaks occurred in Singapore and Vietnam and within 12 weeks spread to other parts of the world, as far as Africa and South America. In the US, an estimated 100,000 died. The mutation of the earlier Asian flu in 1956 possibly gave rise to the H3N2 variation, in a process called the antigenic shift, in which the virus mutates. The death rate was significantly lower than in previous influenza outbreaks, with a case-fatality ratio below 0.5 percent. It is possible that people who were exposed to the earlier pandemic became immune to this particular virus. Improved medical care and the availability of antibiotics, for secondary bacterial infections, have also been cited as factors for the slower spread of the disease. The H3N2 virus is still in circulation today as the seasonal influenza A virus. HIV/Aids Pandemic (1981-)Death Toll: 32 million Cause: Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) that attacks the cells that help the body fight infections. If left untreated, it can lead to the disease, AIDS. HIV attacks and destroys a type of white blood cell in the immune system, called the CD4 cell or T-Helper, and makes copies of itself inside these cells. As it destroys more of these cells and makes more copies of itself, the immune system is gradually weakened - making it difficult for the body to fight off other infections. The last stage of a weakened immune system is AIDS. AIDS was first reported in 1981. Human-to-human transmission can happen through unprotected sexual contact, sharing needles with an HIV-infected person and transfusions of contaminated blood. Almost one million people die each year because of AIDS. According to the WHO, which refers to it as a global epidemic rather than a pandemic, in certain regions of Africa, which remain the most affected, one in every 25 people is living with HIV, accounting for more than two-thirds of the global HIV count. Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) (2002-2003)Death Toll: 774 Cause: SARS-CoV According to the US CDC, SARS-CoV is thought to be a strain of the coronavirus from an as-yet-uncertain animal reservoir, perhaps bats, that spread to other animals (civet cats) and first infected humans in the Guangdong province of southern China in 2002. SARS-CoV spread to at least 26 countries and infected more 8,000 people, although the death toll was considered very low compared to other pandemics. Symptoms are influenza-like and include fever, headache, diarrhoea and shivering. Even at the height of the pandemic, in 2003, the overall risk of transmission was low. Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan were hit the hardest, prompting them to establish medical protocols in anticipation of future pandemics. |
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