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Road to the Viral Superhighway

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Title: Road to the Viral Superhighway


1
Road to the Viral Superhighway
  • George Armelagos

Emory University Anthropology
2
The Plagues
  • So the lord sent a pestilence upon Israel from
    the morning until the appointed time and there
    died of people from Dan to Beer-sheba seventy
    thousand men

2 Samuel24
3
The Plagues
  • Bible
  • blood
  • frogs
  • gnats
  • flies
  • cattle disease
  • boils
  • hail
  • locust
  • darkness
  • death to first born
  • Hollywood
  • Outbreak- imported monkey infected with organ
    liquefying virus becomes a threat to human kind

4
The Plagues
  • Bible
  • blood
  • frogs
  • gnats
  • flies
  • cattle disease
  • boils
  • hail
  • locust
  • darkness
  • death to first born
  • Hollywood
  • Outbreak- imported monkey infected with organ
    liquefying virus becomes a threat to human kind

5
The Plagues
  • Bible
  • blood
  • frogs
  • gnats
  • flies
  • cattle disease
  • boils
  • hail
  • locust
  • darkness
  • death to first born

6
Objectives
  • Emerging disease is an evolutionary trend
    beginning in the Neolithic
  • Neolithic as engine that changes the pattern of
    diet and disease in prehistory
  • Examine the relationship of health and inequality
    from an evolutionary perspective
  • Incorporating the evolutionary concept of
    pathogens as microparasites and structures of
    inequality as macroparasitism

7
Time Frame
  • 99.75 of human existence has been as
    gatherer-hunters
  • .0025 as agriculturist
  • .00125 as urban agriculturist
  • .00005 living in an industrial age

8
Epidemiological Transition
  • A. R. Omran (1971) The control of infectious
    disease and the rise of chronic and degenerative
    diseases
  • Broaden the concept of epidemiological transition
    to include dramatic shifts in disease patterns

9
Epidemiological Transition
  • The first epidemiological transition primary
    food production
  • The second epidemiological transition The
    decline in infectious disease and the rise of
    chronic diseases
  • The third epidemiological transition reemerging
    disease

10
The Paleolithic
  • The gathering and hunting stage (c.a. 4,000,000
    year)
  • Distribution of populations
  • Low density
  • Small population size
  • Semi-nomadic existence

11
Paleolithic Baseline
  • Those that had adapted to the prehominids and
    persisted in hominids
  • Lice and pinworms
  • Salmonella typhi
  • Staphylococci

12
Paleolithic Baseline
  • Zoonoses (pathogens adapted to another host and
    accidentally transmitted to humans)
  • Insect bites
  • Eating infected meat

13
Whats Missing?
  • Smallpox
  • Measles
  • Influenza
  • Mumps

14
The First Epidemiological Transition
Transformation to Primary Food Production
  • Sedentary settlements, increase population size
    and density, and animal domestication increases
    infectious and nutritional disease

15
Emerging Disease in the Neolithic
  • Pathogens that jump their species barriers and
    escape their geographic barriers
  • Animals as vectors for disease
  • Salmonella
  • Ascaris carried by pigs, sheep, cattle
  • Trypanosome and domestication
  • Unwanted self domesticated animals
  • Sparrows and rodents

16
Macroparasitism
  • A concept from McNeil (Plagues and Peoples)
    refers to human groups who extract energy and
    food from less powerful people.
  • Macroparasitism is an evolutionary strategy
  • Macroparasitism began with the evolution of
    social stratification associated with state
    societies it is characteristic most modern
    states.

17
Macroparasitism
  • Social power can insulate elites from food
    shortages and unhygienic living conditions
  • Better access to resources has health benefits
    for wealthy, and it also has adverse health
    effects on the poor -- for both material and
    psychological reasons.
  • Part of the macroparasitic strategy is
    ideological -- blaming outside entities (genes,
    miasma or germs) for the poors misery

18
Preindustrial City
  • Magnifies trends which began in settled village
  • Increase in population size and density
  • Increase in pollution-cholera
  • Deterioration of the environment

19
Preindustrial City
  • Contagious disease
  • Typhus
  • Plague
  • Viral diseases measles, mumps, chicken pox,
    smallpox
  • Syphilis
  • Disease endemicity
  • Class inequalities
  • Colonial expansion

20
Industrial Cities
  • Population size and density
  • Environmental change
  • Industrial wastes
  • Economic inequalities
  • Epidemic disease
  • Typhoid and typhus
  • Smallpox
  • Diphtheria
  • Yellow fever
  • Spread of disease to virgin populations

21
The Second Epidemiological Transition
  • The control of infectious disease
  • The role of medicine
  • Public health measure
  • The role of nutrition

22
SET Effectiveness
  • 50,000,000 deaths each year
  • 17,500,000 from infectious and parasitic
    disease.
  • Two billion people in the world are infected with
    hepatitis B virus
  • 1.7 million have tuberculosis
  • 30 million people are infected with HIV

23
What Was The Extent of the Second Epidemiological
Transition ?
  • Primarily restricted to developed nations
  • Effectively eradicated smallpox and decline of
    polio suggests impact a global impact
  • Technology of the SET created the TET
  • Technological disruption of the environment on a
    global scale
  • Antibiotic resistance

24
The Third Epidemiological Transition and the
Viral Superhighway
  • Reemerging infectious diseases
  • Reemerging infectious disease that are antibiotic
    resistant
  • Multiple antibiotic resistant diseases
  • Emerging infectious diseases
  • Globalization of the disease process

25
Emerging Disease in the Third Epidemiological
Transition
  • Satcher (1995) lists 22 disease that have emerged
    in the last 22 years.
  • Rotovirus Paravovirus B19 Cryptosporidium parvum
  • HIV
  • Legionella pneumophila
  • Hantaan Virus
  • Campylobacter sp.

26
Emerging Disease in the Third Epidemiological
Transition
  • HTLV I
  • Staphylococcus toxin
  • Escherichia coli 0157h7
  • HTLV II
  • Borrelia burgdorferi
  • Ebola
  • Helicobacter pylori
  • Human Herpes Virus

27
Emerging Disease in the Third Epidemiological
Transition
  • Ehrlichia chaffeensis
  • Hepatitis C
  • Guarnarito virus
  • Vibrio Cholera 0139
  • Bartonella (Rochalimaea) henselea
  • Hantavirus isolates
  • Sabia virus

28
Why?
  • The Institute of Medicine (IOM) (1992) reports
    that the emergence of disease is the result of an
    interaction of social, demographic, environmental
    changes in a global ecology and in the adaptation
    and genetics of the microbe.

29
Emerging Disease in the Third Epidemiological
Transition
  • Morse (1995) categorized the factors affecting
    the emergence of disease.
  • Ecological factors
  • Demographic changes
  • International commerce and travel
  • Technological change
  • Breakdown in public health measures
  • Microbial adaptation

30
Health and Inequality
  • The Worlds biggest killer and greatest cause of
    ill-health and suffering across the globe is
    listed almost at the end of the International
    Classification of Disease. It is given in code
    Z59.5--.

WHO World Report (1995)
31
Health and Inequality
  • The Worlds biggest killer and greatest cause of
    ill-health and suffering across the globe is
    listed almost at the end of the International
    Classification of Disease. It is given in code
    Z59.5--extreme poverty.

WHO World Report (1995)
32
Rising Together and Drifting Apart
Sources 1947-79 Analysis of U.S. Census Bureau
data in Economic Policy Institute, The State of
Working America 1994-95, p. 37. 1979-98 U.S.
Census Bureau, Historical Income Tables, Table
F-3 http//www.census.gov/hhes/income/histinc/f03
.html.
33
Bloom and Canning Health, Wealth and the
Demographic Dividend
  • Higher income provides
  • Better nutrition
  • Safer water
  • Greater access to health care
  • Better health means
  • Increased productivity
  • Education (human capital)
  • Investment in physical capital
  • Temporarily increased productivity with
    demographic growth

Income
Health
Health
Income
34
The Increasing Inequality Gap is Cause for Worry
  • The large gap in income between the rich and poor
    always increase health risks for the poor in the
    context of scarce resources
  • Severe poverty is a major cause of the
    reemergence of infectious disease in the 3rd
    epidemiological transition
  • economic conditions accelerate the evolution of
    antibiotic resistance
  • The End of the Antibiotic Era

35
Health and Inequality
  • Once medicine is established as anthropology,
    and once the interests of the privileged no
    longer determine the course of public events, the
    physiologist and practitioner will be counted
    among the elder statesman who support the social
    structure. Medicine is a social science in its
    very bone and marrow.

R. Virchow
36
Conclusion
  • An evolutionary perspective suggests a common
    element in our adaptation for at least 10,000
    years.
  • The acceleration of emerging disease in the urban
    and industrial
  • Pattern continues in many parts of the world
  • The second epidemiological transition was a short
    respite in selected areas of the developed world

37
Conclusion
  • The third epidemiological transition with the
    globalization of antibiotic diseases brings
    evolution back to us in dramatic fashion.
  • What can we do?
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