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Encyclopedia of Health and Medicine

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2 Preventive <strong>Medicine</strong><br />

Public <strong>Health</strong><br />

Improvements in COMMUNITY SANITATION, such as<br />

sewage <strong>and</strong> garbage control, in the late 19th <strong>and</strong><br />

early 20th centuries further contained diseases<br />

spread through close contact reduced pest <strong>and</strong><br />

vermin infestation <strong>and</strong> the resultant diseases,<br />

including the much dreaded “black death,”<br />

plague. Cities <strong>and</strong> towns focused effort on maintaining<br />

clean <strong>and</strong> safe drinking water supplies,<br />

decreasing waterborne illnesses. The home refrigerator<br />

debuted in 1913 <strong>and</strong> quickly replaced the<br />

icebox as the st<strong>and</strong>ard for food storage, dramatically<br />

decreasing FOODBORNE ILLNESSES.<br />

Doctors <strong>and</strong> others began to recognize, by the<br />

start <strong>of</strong> the 20th century, the extent to which community<br />

<strong>and</strong> personal cleanliness influenced health<br />

<strong>and</strong> illness. Poor ventilation <strong>and</strong> overcrowded living<br />

<strong>and</strong> working conditions, especially in densely<br />

populated cities, encouraged rampant <strong>and</strong> rapid<br />

spread <strong>of</strong> infectious diseases. In 1900 pneumonia,<br />

tuberculosis, <strong>and</strong> GASTROENTERITIS together were to<br />

blame for a third <strong>of</strong> all deaths in the United States.<br />

Annual influenza outbreaks could kill entire families,<br />

even communities, within weeks. In cities,<br />

infections caused the deaths <strong>of</strong> nearly a third <strong>of</strong><br />

infants before their first birthdays.<br />

With clean water st<strong>and</strong>ards came assurances<br />

that bathing would no longer be the source <strong>of</strong> illness<br />

but rather could be the guardian <strong>of</strong> health.<br />

Public <strong>of</strong>ficials began to extol the virtues <strong>of</strong> frequent<br />

HAND WASHING <strong>and</strong> daily, or at least weekly,<br />

bathing. Between 1920 <strong>and</strong> 1937 illnesses <strong>and</strong><br />

deaths from waterborne infections such as cholera<br />

<strong>and</strong> typhoid fever plummeted, <strong>and</strong> by 1950 were<br />

nearly nonexistent. <strong>Health</strong> <strong>of</strong>ficials also encouraged<br />

opening windows <strong>and</strong> getting fresh air,<br />

measures that helped dilute the concentration <strong>of</strong><br />

airborne pathogens such as viruses <strong>and</strong> BACTERIA<br />

<strong>and</strong> reduce opportunities for infection to occur. In<br />

1944 the US Congress passed the Public <strong>Health</strong><br />

Service Act that established a consistent framework<br />

for public health laws, st<strong>and</strong>ards, <strong>and</strong> procedures<br />

throughout the United States.<br />

Life expectancy A key measure <strong>of</strong> public health<br />

<strong>and</strong> the effectiveness <strong>of</strong> disease-prevention efforts<br />

is LIFE EXPECTANCY. A child born in 1900 could<br />

expect to live to age 47. A child born in 1950, the<br />

dawn <strong>of</strong> the golden era <strong>of</strong> preventive health care,<br />

could expect to live nearly half again as long, to<br />

age 68. These children were the first who also<br />

could expect to grow up without experiencing the<br />

CHILDHOOD DISEASES that claimed the lives <strong>of</strong> one in<br />

five children in their parents’ generation.<br />

Epidemics <strong>and</strong> p<strong>and</strong>emics Epidemics <strong>and</strong> p<strong>and</strong>emics<br />

strike fear in the hearts <strong>of</strong> health experts<br />

<strong>and</strong> individuals alike. Epidemics are extensive but<br />

localized outbreaks <strong>of</strong> illness or infection. P<strong>and</strong>emics<br />

are worldwide outbreaks. Despite vaccination<br />

efforts, annual influenza epidemics sicken<br />

millions <strong>and</strong> cause the deaths <strong>of</strong> 30,000 Americans.<br />

<strong>Health</strong> experts believe basic preventive<br />

measures such as frequent h<strong>and</strong> washing <strong>and</strong><br />

appropriate SNEEZE/COUGH ETIQUETTE, combined<br />

with more comprehensive vaccination, could prevent<br />

most <strong>of</strong> these infections.<br />

The Spanish influenza epidemic <strong>of</strong> 1918, the<br />

worst p<strong>and</strong>emic <strong>of</strong> modern history, claimed the lives<br />

<strong>of</strong> half a million Americans <strong>and</strong> more than 20 million<br />

people worldwide. It also provided much learning<br />

for public health <strong>of</strong>ficials about how, <strong>and</strong> how<br />

quickly, such infections spread. <strong>Health</strong> experts have<br />

used this knowledge to develop mechanisms <strong>and</strong><br />

systems to detect <strong>and</strong> report outbreaks that have<br />

p<strong>and</strong>emic potential. Such efforts could not entirely<br />

prevent, though did help contain, influenza p<strong>and</strong>emics<br />

in 1957 (the Asian flu) <strong>and</strong> 1968 (the Hong<br />

Kong flu). They did, however, allow early detection<br />

<strong>and</strong> containment <strong>of</strong> small outbreaks <strong>of</strong> avian<br />

influenza in 2000 <strong>and</strong> 2004, <strong>and</strong> <strong>of</strong> the deadly SEVERE<br />

ACUTE RESPIRATORY SYNDROME (SARS).<br />

Motor vehicle safety A uniquely modern-day<br />

public health issue is motor vehicle safety. Coming<br />

into its own in the early 1900s, the automobile<br />

wasted little time acquiring notoriety. By the time<br />

Henry Ford set the st<strong>and</strong>ard for the “everyman”<br />

car, MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENTS had already claimed<br />

more than 40,000 lives. By the 1960s, motor vehicle<br />

accidents accounted for more than 40,000<br />

deaths each year. Measures such as structural<br />

integrity requirements, seat belts, <strong>and</strong> airbags<br />

have held motor vehicle deaths steady near that<br />

level since 1998.<br />

Individual <strong>Health</strong> Factors<br />

The recognition that PERSONAL HYGIENE—frequent<br />

h<strong>and</strong> washing <strong>and</strong> daily or at least weekly<br />

bathing—could prevent the passing <strong>of</strong> disease<br />

from one person to another was a milestone in

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