The Pandemic Arc: Expanded Narratives in the History of Global Health

被引:2
|
作者
Green, Monica H.
机构
关键词
paleogenomics; plague; smallpox; HIV/AIDS; zoonotics (One Health); disease emergence; Global Health; global history; climate change; YERSINIA-PESTIS; PLAGUE; EPIDEMIC; REVEALS;
D O I
10.1093/jhmas/jrae008
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Using the examples of plague, smallpox, and HIV/AIDS, the present essay argues for the benefits of incorporating the evolutionary histories of pathogens, beyond visible epidemic spikes within human populations, into our understanding of what pandemics actually are as epidemiological phenomena. The pandemic arc - which takes the pathogen as the defining "actor" in a pandemic, from emergence to local proliferation to globalization - offers a framework capable of bringing together disparate aspects not only of the manifestations of disease but also of human involvement in the pandemic process. Pathogens may differ, but there are common patterns in disease emergence and proliferation that distinguish those diseases that become pandemic, dispersed through human communities regionally or globally. The same methods of genomic analysis that allow tracking the evolutionary development of a modern pathogen such as SARS-CoV-2 also allow us to trace pandemics into the past. Reconstruction of these pandemic arcs brings new elements of these stories into view, recovering the experiences of regions and populations hitherto overlooked by Eurocentric narratives. This expanded global history of infectious diseases, in turn, lays a groundwork for reconceiving what ambitions a truly global health might aim for.
引用
收藏
页码:345 / 362
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The Need for Antiviral Drugs for Pandemic Coronaviruses From a Global Health Perspective
    Villamagna, Angela Holly
    Gore, Sara J.
    Lewis, James S.
    Doggett, J. Stone
    FRONTIERS IN MEDICINE, 2020, 7
  • [32] Pandemic COVID-19 Joins History's Pandemic Legion
    Morens, David M.
    Daszak, Peter
    Markel, Howard
    Taubenberger, Jeffery K.
    MBIO, 2020, 11 (03):
  • [34] The healthscaping approach: Toward a global history of early public health
    Geltner, G.
    Coomans, J.
    HISTORICAL METHODS, 2023, 56 (01): : 18 - 33
  • [35] Making morbidity multiple: History, legacies, and possibilities for global health
    Dixon, Justin
    Mendenhall, Emily
    Bosire, Edna N.
    Limbani, Felix
    Ferrand, Rashida A.
    Chandler, Clare I. R.
    JOURNAL OF MULTIMORBIDITY AND COMORBIDITY, 2023, 13
  • [36] BRICS and Global Health Diplomacy in the Covid-19 Pandemic: Situating BRICS' diplomacy within the prevailing global health governance context
    Moore, Candice
    REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE POLITICA INTERNACIONAL, 2022, 65 (02):
  • [37] Synthetic biology in Global Health: lessons from history and anthropology
    Liu, Jennifer A.
    JOURNAL OF RESPONSIBLE INNOVATION, 2015, 2 (01) : 96 - 99
  • [38] Balancing Equity and Global Health Security Towards a Fair and Effective Pandemic Agreement
    Renganathan, Elil
    Tediosi, Fabrizio
    Abecasis, Ana
    Bassat, Quique
    Berner-Rodoreda, Astrid
    Casamitjana, Nuria
    Froeschl, Guenter
    Kashima, Simone
    Placencia, Antoni
    Raviglione, Mario
    Rocamora, Alberto
    Skordis, Jolene
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2025, 70
  • [39] COVID-19 pandemic: a time for collaboration and a unified global health front
    Vervoort, Dominique
    Ma, Xiya
    Luc, Jessica G. Y.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR QUALITY IN HEALTH CARE, 2021, 33 (01)
  • [40] Pandemic Response and Global Health in Norwegian Foreign Policy - and in the UN Security Council
    Halvorsen, Audun
    INTERNASJONAL POLITIKK, 2021, 79 (04) : 444 - 449