Pandemic

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Pieter Bruegel the Elder's "The Triumph of Death" (c. 1562 CE), depicting the results of a pandemic
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It was now, as I said before, People had cast off all Apprehensions, and that too fast; indeed we were no more afraid now to pass by a Man with a white Cap upon his Head, or with a Cloth wrapt round his Neck, or with his Leg limping, occasion'd by the Sores in his Groyn, all which were frightful to the last Degree, but the Week before; but now the Street was full of them, and these poor recovering Creatures…
—Daniel DeFoe[1]:314

A pandemic occurs when a dangerous disease breaks out across the world — as opposed to an epidemic, which involves a localized disease. The usual criterion for a pandemic is something that spreads across different continents at epidemic levels and that isn't the seasonal flu. Pandemics used to take years if not decades to cover the globe, but due to the increase in travel technology, an outbreak in one part of the world can now quickly spread to a major city and from there to the rest of the world. The term "pandemic" has a connotation of referring to an especially bad outbreak, but it refers to the distribution of the event, not the severity.

Because pandemics are very real low-probability but high-consequence events that strike with little or no warning, there is an intersection between concerned government officials (who have to plan ahead of time because of how fast a disease may spread) and survivalism circles. Some of the latter can descend to woo (for example: "The world will be purged in a tide of blood by ebola") but there's no one in the relevant fields who isn't afraid of bird-flu adapting to mammals.

Notable pandemics include the "Spanish" influenza pandemic[2] of 1918-1919, which was encouraged by large numbers of military personnel during/after World War I suffering from poor sanitation and traveling between continents, and the ongoing AIDS pandemic which started in the 20th century. A recent (if less fatal) disease which the media called a "potential pandemic" was SARS,[3] which originated in China and made its way to Toronto, Canada. The bird flu virus (H5N1) has been seen as a possible pandemic virus. In May 2009 the World Health Organization[4] classified Swine flu (H1N1) as a pandemic — it killed over 14,000 people. (Some portions of the press seemed to think that this pandemic never actually happened, and that it was all scaremongering.)

The 2019-20 COVID-19 outbreak (also known, before the virus was named, as the 2019–20 coronavirus pandemicWikipedia) is an ongoing pandemic caused by a coronavirusWikipedia named SARS-CoV-2 (formerly 2019-nCoV), causing the disease named COVID-19.[5]

See also[edit]

  • Contagion — a pro-science film about developing a vaccine to counter a pandemic

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. A Journal Of The Plague Year by Daniel DeFoe (1895 [1665]). George Routledge & Sons.
  2. See the Wikipedia article on Spanish flu.
  3. See the Wikipedia article on Severe acute respiratory syndrome.
  4. See the Wikipedia article on World Health Organization.
  5. "Coronavirus disease named Covid-19", BBC News, 11 February 2020.

Categories: [Disease]


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