What is a Pandemic and the History of Pandemics
165-180AD - The Antonine Plague
- Roman Troops returning from Middle East brought back small pox or measles - Disease swept through Rome and contributed to fall or Roman Empire
430 B.C. Plague of Athens
- Typhoid (or small pox) Never identified but typhoid current thinking - Killed 30,000-100,000 people in athens - Athens population reduced by one to two thirds
Spanish Flu (1918-1920 AD)
- Virulent strain of Influenza A - Virus turned healthy immune systems against you - Affected nearly one third of world population - Killed 20-100 million - More deadly than all 20th century wars combined - In just 18 months at least 1/3rd of population was infected - Dense troops led to increased infection
Ebola 2014-16; 2018-2019
- West Africa - Killed more than 11,300 people before it was declared over - 2018-19 outbreak in DRC was complex
Endemic Disease
An infectious disease that has a constant or usual presence within a given geographic area or population group
Infectious Diseases
Causedf by interaction between pathogens, animal hosts, disease vectors, people at risk, and socio-cultural/political and natural environments
Epidemic
Occurrence in a community or region of cases of an illness in excess of normal expectancy
Pandemic phases
Phase 1-3 - Predominantly animal infections Phase 4 - Sustained human transmission Phase 5 - Wide spread human infection Post Peak - % of movement events Post Pandemic - Disease at sustained levels
Case Study - Polio
- Polio Virus - Faecal-oral route - Use to be devastating disease - Very effective vaccine has been developed - Almost 99% decline through widespread vaccination and improved living conditions
Infectious Diseases Examples
- Prions - Viruses - Bacteria - Fungi - Protozoa - Multicellular parasites
Pandemic Futures
- 1960s to 70s assumed infectious diseases burden had passed at least in Global North - Chronic diseases emerging as key 'killer' despite other countries still suffering
Plague of 1519
- Around 25 million living in 'Mexico' when Hernandez Cortes arrived in 1519 - Smallpox epidemic killed 5-8 million of indigenous population following 2 years - Over next century, less than 2 million would survive this and other communicable diseases brought by European explorers - Immunologically naive people - Not been exposed to diseases therefore vulnerable
Micro-organism need the right environment to survive
- Biological - Host (e.g. behaviours, genes...) - Social (living conditions, exposure to animals) - Environmental (temp., rainfall) - Economic (poverty) - Political (social unrest, migration, health system access) Etc.
Black Death (1347-1351AD)
- Bubonic plague - caused by bacterium that circulates among wild rodent - Arrived in Western Europe via merchant ships - Killed 75-200 mill, including 40-60% of Europe's population - Killed half of the world's population
Avian Flu/Bird Flu (H5N1)
- Epizootic circulation of avian H5N1 virus led in 2003, to occasional human 'spill over' - 60% fatality rate - Doesn't spread easily from human to human - Reached Phase 1-3
Pandemic Enablers
- High population densities, trade routes, wars, human mobility
Features of Pandemics
- Infectious Disease - High attack rates - Novel - Severe - Wide geographic distribution - Transmitted person to person - Disease movement from place to place - Minimum population immunity
Why do Epidemics and Pandemics Occur?
- Is 'natural' - another micro-organism is trying to survive - If organism thrives and causes widespread disease it becomes endemic-pandemic
HIV/AIDS 1981-
- More than 35 million people living infected - 32 million people have died from illnesses reacting to AIDS
Infectious Diseases in 21st Century
- Optimism misplaced - HIV - Corona - SARS - Dengue - Malaria - Tuberculosis
Transmission Routes
1. Air droplet - E.g. Tuberculosis, Covid-19 - Inhalation 2. Faecal-Oral - Polio - Ingestion of faecal matter - Through poor water and sanitation 3. Sexual - HIV - Syphillus - Unprotected sex 4. Vector-Borne - Malaria - Dengue - Mosquito bite 5. Blood - HIV - Unsafe injections - Transfusion 6. Mother-child - Hepatitus B - HIV - Childbirth/breast milk
Epidemiological Transitions
1st Transition: Foraging to Food Production (10,000 years ago) - Increase in population density, domestication of animals, sedentary lifestyles, social stratification -> shift in disease ecology and increase infectious diseases 2nd Transition: Rise of NCDs - Decline in infectious diseases - Rise in non-communicable diseases (NCD) 3rd Transition: (Re)emerging infectious diseases - Infectious diseases re-emerging - Antibiotic/antimicrobal resistance increases as well as novel diseases
Pandemic
The spread of infectious disease over a very wide area and usually affects a large portion of the population