Medical Geography - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Medical Geography

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Medical Geography Introduction Medical Geography Developed from the work of Dr. John Snow Trying to stop the transmission of cholera 1854- outbreak of cholera in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Medical Geography


1
Medical Geography
  • Introduction

2
Medical Geography
  • Developed from the work of Dr. John Snow
  • Trying to stop the transmission of cholera
  • 1854- outbreak of cholera in London
  • Dr. Snow plotted the deaths from cholera on a
    map, determining an unusually high number of
    deaths were linked with a particular water pump-
    on Broad St.
  • He petitioned to have the pump closed, which led
    to a drastic decrease in new cholera deaths.
  • One of most famous and earliest instances of
    using maps to understand spread of disease

3
Snows Cholera map
4
Worldwide causes of death
  • medical geographers measure health strictly in
    terms of morbidity (illness and disease
    complications) and mortality (death).
  • In addition to diffusion over space, they also
    focus on diffusion over time- known as
    spatio-temporal mapping and analysis

Developed countries
Developing countries
5
Definitions
  • epidemiology - study of occurrence, distribution,
    and control of diseases in populations
  • origin, spread or communication, and eradication
    of disease
  • incidence - number of diseased individuals in a
    defined population
  • endemic - constantly present disease
  • epidemic - abnormally high incidence locally
  • pandemic - abnormally high incidence over a wide
    geographic area (worldwide?)
  • vector- agent used as a vehicle for transfer.
  • (disease vector agent that transfers a pathogen
    from one organism to another (e.g., an insect))
    can also be viral, including a live virus used as
    an antigen delivery vehicle in a vaccine

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Recent worldwide outbreaks of disease
11
Historical aspects
  • Paleolithic- low populations/ good diets keep
    diseases from becoming endemic
  • Neolithic- population density increases, animal
    domestication occurs, diets deteriorated
    (dependence on grains mainly), water borne
    diseases
  • Imperial period- trade increases, urban areas
    become more unhealthy
  • Medieval- plague, trade decreases, population
    decreases, epidemics frequent but less virulent
  • Exploration- introduction of disease to virgin
    populations, trans-Atlantic slave trade

12
More Historical geographies
  • Industrial Age- more trade-gt more diffusion of
    disease, urban slums (diet and exhaustion),
    endemic diseases become childhood ones, rapid
    population growth, hygiene
  • Today

Factors Contributing To New Infections
  1. Population Growth
  2. Urbanization
  3. Expansion Into New Areas
  4. Ecological Changes
  5. Reduced Biodiversity
  6. Microbial And Vector Resistance
  • Water Pollution
  • Global Warming
  • Ozone Hole
  • Public Health Deficiencies
  • War
  • Transport
  • Other Changes

13
Risks?
  • Complacency with endemic disease?
  • Non-vaccinated groups?
  • Antibiotic resistant strains?
  • New Epidemics?
  • Danger related to means of transmission
  • Direct contact (person to person) containable
  • Water and food borne- contained with adequate
    public health measures
  • more difficult to control vectors.
  • Air-borne diseases pose the greatest threat.
  • Influenza greatest threat?
  • Germ warfare?

14
Control of Epidemics
  • Improved resistance
  • Improve nutrition reduce population
    concentrations lighter work loads
  • Control Reservoir
  • Reduce mosquitoes and their breeding grounds
  • immunize animals (e.g. rabies)
  • Control transmission
  • direct contact (including STDs)
  • Food, water, air, feces
  • Immunizations
  • Recommended for Foreign Travel
  • cholera, yellow fever, plague, infectious
    hepatitis A, serum hepatitis B, typhoid fever,
    malaria
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