Anthrax used to kill millions of sheep and cows in france and undoubtedly more in the rest of the world. It was a huge economic drain for herdsman and could be dangerous to humans as well.…
The virus is spread by humans; on shoes, clothes and animals; fur, paws after having come into contact with infected soil or faeces. The virus can live in soil for up to a year.…
Tuesday morning, the United States Hospitals, day to day operations began just like any other. By 10:00am, during the administration’s morning meeting, the sound of the code red alarm rang throughout the facility. Dr. Inspection, an epidemiologist, informs the team that he has positive test results identifying anthrax in the system of 10 patients. Shock crosses all faces in the board room, but survival mode quickly takes over. The hospital administration and Committee Chair agree with the recommendation of the epidemiologist to enact the bioterrorism readiness plan. The procedures had just been written into the IC policy 9 months ago. Although the document does have a…
Anthrax is contagious and highly fatal if you have been exposed to it as when it is breathed in through the respiratory tract, it enters the lungs it causes internal bleeding, swelling and tissue death.…
Smallpox emerged around 200 years after the Black Death, during the mid-14th century, and quickly became one of the biggest killers in the expanding world. (Dobson,p.130) Smallpox changed the beauty standards in Europe through the use of makeup, fashion, and accessories. This disease struck in all social classes of society and was not dependent on status, wealth, sanitary conditions, or hygiene. Because of that, smallpox was sometimes referred to as the “democratic” disease (Skold,p.145) People believe that the Inca and Aztec empire likely collapsed because of smallpox. Hernan Cortes and his 300 men attacked the Aztec capital a force of 300,00 and captured the city within the span of three months. (Altman. p.42) This likely occurred because the Spaniards have had years of exposure to smallpox due to Columbus crossing the Atlantic from Europe to Africa and carrying the disease. (Dobson,p.130) On the other hand, the Aztecs and Incas were not immune to the ravages of the disease and quickly became weak which led to the collapse of the civilizations. (Altman, p.42)…
Richard Morton gave the name of Chickenpox in the 1600’s. ^ Although, Richard gave it the name in the 1600’s, a man named Giovanni Filippo was believed to have been the first to discover it. Chickenpox is said to be closely related to the smallpox which deadly and they assumed that chickenpox was smallpox. In the 1700’s a man named William Heberden did his research and confirmed that it was not the same as smallpox. That the two were different.…
Twelve Diseases that Changed Our World One learns about the awful and disastrous effects that past infectious diseases had on our world. Millions of people died from them then and they continue to dwindle down populations that have no way to protect themselves against the killers. In Irwin W. Sherman’s book Twelve Diseases that Changed Our World, he explores 12 of the hundreds of diseases that have left their murderous mark on the world. The diseases that Sherman discusses are Porphyria and Hemophilia, Irish Potato Blight, Cholera, Smallpox, Bubonic Plague, Syphilis, Tuberculosis, Malaria, Yellow Fever, Great Influenza, and AIDS.…
The discovery of the vaccine for smallpox disease ended a global outbreak of death and helped keep powerful empires from falling. Smallpox ranks among the most devastating illnesses ever suffered by humankind, smallpox is an acute contagious disease caused by the variola virus. The disease is spread through direct contact with infected people or body fluids or with contaminated objects. The disease is thought to have originated in India or Egypt about 3,000 years ago, with the earliest evidence dating back to 1157 B.C. In the 20th century it killed some 300 million people globally (National 1).…
The plague from 1347 to 1350 in Europe was one of the miserable events in European history. Merchants brought the plague from Constantinople to Europe in 1347 and the plague began to spread quickly throughout Europe. During these 3 years were the peak of the plague in Europe and huge percentages of people died. Siena was also one of the central commercial city-states in Italy that suffered from the plague. When the plague arrived to Siena in 1348, fifty percentage or probably more of the population decreased by the plague.…
The Black Death had taken a toll on society. Millions of people died within a matter of weeks. Entire families wiped out by this plague. Mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, everybody was dying. Every layer of society was affected. Lower class, middle class, and upper class were all affected. Some citizens turned to witchcraft and magic, some turned to drinking or other pleasures, and others turned to God asking him why. If the citizens were not affected by the disease itself, they were affected by the damage it had done. No matter how much money a family owned, they still could not beat the plague. One of the effects of everybody dying was no jobs were getting done. No jobs getting done meant no food or trade. A society can not live without…
One of the most devastating pandemics in human history was The Black Death. It killed over 200 million people during the seven years from 1346 to 1353. People think that The Black Death originated from Central Asia and traveled with fleas and rodents on The Silk Road. The Black Death actually arrived in ships with sailors that were sick, had fever, unable to keep food down and had really bad pain but the scariest of them all was their body were covered with mysterious black boils that oozed out blood and pus. Before messina had the ship filled with dead and sick sailors, europeans heard a rumor called the “Great Pestilence,” which were carvings on a deadly path across the trade routes between the Near and Far East. Before the 200 million people dying during the seven years, The…
Between April and December of 1721, over six thousand colonists in Boston contracted a world-wide feared viral infection known as smallpox. After the occurrence of over nine hundred deaths in Boston alone, the infestation of this disease in the colony became known as the Smallpox Epidemic. During the epidemic, it became widely acknowledged that survivors of smallpox were immune to later occurrences of the disease. This led to the consideration of the medical practice of inoculation—the deliberate introduction of the living smallpox virus to cause a mild case of the disease that would provide immunity. In contrast to the claims of its creators, inoculation was not always successful and did result in a small number of deaths in patients, but…
Feral hogs reproduce rapidly, increasing their population dramatically and very quickly. The hogs not only cause damage to farms, they can also transmit diseases to livestock. Jason Garrett of the Overton County Cattleman’s Association says, “This is a serious threat to all of agriculture” (Garrett). If the wild hog population is not controlled, these animals can take a toll on farmland and also on revenues from crop and livestock production.…
They avoid the sadness and the tragedy that the walls hide, cows are often in most times treated very very badly. According to The Humane Society of U.S.A. cows are slaughtered at the age of only 16-18 weeks and about 30% are kept in “housing-groups” which they are individually confined, which they are kept there till they have reached the slaughtering weight. It is often assumed that they are slaughtered in a humane, clean way however more than 40 million cows die every year, they are beat almost to death, dragged, often forced to starve and dehydrate, electrocuted, poked, branded, and pushed into processing lines terrified of what beholds the end of that line. Most slaughterhouses use the slicing of the neck method or the bolt gun method, although 40% of the time it is ineffective and leaves the animal conscious throughout the process of being dismembered and…
Diseases such as hepatitis a and b,rabies come from reptiles and mammals in captivity. Finally animals can bring viruses or infections on their fur and can affect their owner or little children. 78,000 people die because of zoo antic. In the meantime people should think first about their family before getting an exotic animal because they can bring deadly disease to everyone in the family or other…