Invited commentary: The context and challenge of von Pettenkofer's contributions to epidemiology

被引:8
作者
Oppenheimer, Gerald M.
Susser, Ezra
机构
[1] CUNY, Brooklyn Coll, Brooklyn, NY USA
[2] Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, New York, NY USA
[3] New York State Psychiat Inst & Hosp, New York, NY USA
关键词
cholera; disease outbreaks; epidemiologic methods; Germany; history; 19th century; history of medicine; public health; sanitation;
D O I
10.1093/aje/kwm284
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Max von Pettenkofer is largely remembered for swallowing cholera vibrio, trying thereby to falsify the claim of his rival, the contagionist Robert Koch, that the bacillus he had isolated was cholera's sufficient cause. In this issue of the American Journal of Epidemiology, Alfredo Morabia reminds us that von Pettenkofer was more than this futile gesture. He was a 19th century public health leader whose multifactorial theory of cholera etiology deeply influenced the dominant anticontagionist school of disease transmission. His authority was undercut by the massive 1892 cholera epidemic in Hamburg, Germany. As it took off, the German government sent in Koch, who successfully contained the epidemic through interventions that von Pettenkofer regularly repudiated-quarantine, disinfection, and the boiling of water. The authors situate the antagonism between these two individuals within a broader scientific and political context that includes the evolution of miasma theory and debates over the role of governments confronted by epidemic disease. They also note that Koch's approach, which focused narrowly on the agent and its eradication, was missing key elements required for applying germ theory to public health. As scientists later incorporated biologic, host, and environmental factors into the germ theory paradigm, they reintroduced some of the complexity that had previously characterized the miasma model.
引用
收藏
页码:1239 / 1241
页数:3
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