Long before Covid-19 ever terrorized the American public there was an even more insidious disease called Yellow Fever that brought America to its knees-and it is today threatening a deadly comeback thanks to the acceleration of climate change. In a vividly told narrative, filled with poignant and graphic scenes culled from historical archives, James L. Dickerson, author of Cirrhosis: An Essential Guide for the Newly Diagnosed and Inside America's Concentration Camps: Two Centuries of Internment and Torture, recounts the history in this investigative book of one of the most feared diseases in American history. From the late 18th to the early 20th century, yellow fever killed Americans by the tens of thousands in the Northeast and throughout the South. Especially devastated by yellow fever were Mississippi, New Orleans, and Memphis, Tennessee. In Memphis alone, five thousand people died in 1878. Dickerson describes how public health officials gradually eliminated the disease from this country, so that by the mid-1950s it had ceased to be of much concern to the public at large. However, to this day no cure has been found. As a mosquito-borne viral infection, yellow fever is impervious to antibiotics, and it continues to wreak havoc in parts of South America and Africa. Focusing on the present, Dickerson discusses the potential threat of yellow fever as a biological warfare agent in the hands of terrorists. Also of concern to public health researchers is the effect of global warming on mosquito populations. Even a one-to-two degree warming enables disease-bearing mosquitoes to move into areas once protected by colder weather. He concludes with a discussion of current precautionary efforts based on interviews with experts and analysis of available studies. Both absorbing history and a timely wake-up call for the present, Yellow Fever is fascinating and important reading.
Dickerson made learning about a disease interesting!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
I read Yellow Fever by James Dickerson for my college microbiology class. Dickerson made it very interesting and intriguing to learn about the deadly disease. He linked it with current events, such as global warming and todays population and climates. I loved correlating historical events I learned growing up with the epidemics of yellow fever. For example, Amherst, Massachusetts was named for Lord Jeffrey Amherst, whom had blankets sent to America from small pox hospitals to infect Native Americans. Yellow fever is quite unique in that after how far technology and science has come that there still in no cure or specific treatment for the disease. In the back of the book tells you ways of how to look for yellow fever symptoms, what you should know about the vaccine and how to protect yourself.
Sobering history of yellow fever in U.S. history and the threat it may pose to our nation in the fut
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
If you are a student of U.S. history then you have likely read about the impact that yellow fever has had on our nation. Most notably, a major outbreak of the disease occured in the summer of 1793 in the city of Philadelphia, then our nation's capitol. When all was said and done more than 4000 of the Philadelphia's 28,000 residents lost their lives. Most of Congress and even President George Washington were forced to abandon the city. Commerce practically ceased and the wheels of our fledging government ground to a halt. Those citizens who were fortunate enough to survive were indelibly scarred for life. In "Yellow Fever" author James Dickerson not only chronicles the events of that devasting summer in Philadelphia but also takes a look at how yellow fever outbreaks impacted a number of other major American cities during the 19th and early 20th centuries. This is compelling and eye-opening reading to be sure! I first became interested in the subject of yellow fever when I read the John R. Pierce and James V. Writer book "Yellow Jack" about a year ago. I wanted to know more. Dickerson's "Yellow Fever" offers the reader a fairly comprehensive history of why the United States government placed such a high priority on conquering yellow fever. Dickerson does not mince words when he describes the symptoms of this dreaded disease and offers an actual unedited autopsy report that describes in gruesome detail how yellow fever can ravage the body. "Yellow Fever" also introduces the reader to those dogged and courageous individuals who would be ultimately responsible for practically eradicating this disease including a Cuban doctor named Juan Carlos Finlay, the U.S. Surgeon General George Miller Sternberg and of course the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Board, a four man panel led by Major Walter Reed. What worries James Dickerson and legions of doctors and scientists all over the world is the prospect that global warming will lead to a resurgance of tropical diseases such as yellow fever. This is a prospect we in North America are ill prepared for. But is this a threat we should take seriously? It seems to me that we should. Over the past decade there have been increasing incidents of mosquito induced tropical diseases such as West Nile virus, encephalitis and even malaria reported in all but a handful of states throughout the country. "Yellow Fever" presents still more convincing evidence that the U.S government should finally take the issue of global warming seriously and pursue laws and policies that will reduce our emission of greenhouse gases. It constantly amazes me how many of my friends and relatives completely dismiss the idea of global warming. How much more evidence do they need? An interesting and well written book. Highly recommended.
A wake-up call in providing not just a history of a bygone threat
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
YELLOW FEVER: A DEADLY DISEASE POISED TO KILL AGAIN poses a wake-up call in providing not just a history of a bygone threat, but discussion of how it's a prime candidate for use as a biological weapon - and prime for re-emergence in the face of global warming. These two threats alone make YELLOW FEVER more than just a survey of the past, providing it an immediacy and importance which justifies the author's focus. A vivid narrative traces its emergence and impact from the late 18th to the early 20th century, describing attempts to contain and eliminate the disease and adding important chapters which consider how it can be used by terrorists today - and how it might come back on its own. A 'must' for any serious public or school library health collection. Diane C. Donovan California Bookwatch
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