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Title: The Bubonic Plague and Rubella A Comparison


1
The Bubonic PlagueandRubellaA Comparison
Ellen Perlow HS 5353 Epidemiology Dr.
Wiginton Fall 2002 Texas Womans University
Dept. of Health Studies November 19, 2002
http//www.a4access.org/epipaper.ppt Narrative at
http//www.a4access.org/epipaper1102.doc This
presentation is available in alternative formats
upon request.
2
I.History and Current Status of The
Bubonic PlagueandRubella
3
Agent BacteriumYersinia pestisVector
Blood-sucking rat flea Xenopsylla cheopis
Hosts Rodents-rats/shrews, prairie dogs, etc.
Environment Rodent-friendly food, garbage,
unsanitary conditionsTransmission a) Most
common mode bite of flea infected with Yersinia
pestis bacterium b) less frequently direct
contact with infectious body fluids or tissues
while handling infected animal or c) inhaling
infectious respiratory droplets or other
infectious materials.
Bubonic Plague Enzootic
4
Types of Plague
  • Bubonic plague most common form of U.S. cases
    80-90. Case Fatality Rate if not treated
    50-60
  • Septicemic plague when Yersinia pestis invades
    and continues to multiply in the bloodstream
    primary or secondary to bubonic plague. U.S.
    1947-1977 10 septicemic. Case fatality
    rate-50. Complications septic shock,
    consumptive coagulopathy, meningitis, coma.
  • Pneumonic plague least common but most dangerous
    and fatal form - inhalation of infectious
    respiratory droplets. Incubation period 1-3
    days. Without treatment, death within 18 hours
    after onset of respiratory symptoms. (Centers for
    Disease Control and Prevention (1996). Prevention
    of plague recommendations of the Advisory
    Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).
    Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 45(RR-14)
    1-15.

5
History of Bubonic Plague - 1
  • Biblical times circa 1000 B.C.E.
  • 1 Samuel 5 capture of Ark of Covenant from
    Israelites by Philistines at battle of Aphek
    followed by outbreak of what appears to have been
    the plague in five cities of the Philistines
    starting in Ashdod. (Septuagint/Vulgate
    Philistines smitten with tumors and rats
    appeared in their land and death and destruction
    were throughout the cities.
  • (Griffin, J.P. (2000) Bubonic plague in Biblical
    times. Letter. Journal of the Royal Society of
    Medicine, 93, 449.)

6
History of Bubonic Plague - 2
  • Summer 430 B.C.E. Athens
  • Athens at war with Sparta
  • Sailors brought mysterious illness from Egypt.
    1/3 population of Athens died. Pericles killed.
  • Changed history Athens lost to Sparta.
  • Could have been typhus, smallpox, scarlet fever.
  • (Giblin, J.C. (1995). When plague strikes the
    Black Death, smallpox, AIDS. HarperCollins, 1-3.)

7
History of Bubonic Plague - 3
  • 1346-1347 Black Sea/S. Ukraine
  • Epidemic Victims suffered from headaches, felt
    weak and tired, and staggered when they try to
    walk. By the third day, the lymph nodes in the
    sufferers groins, or occasionally their armpits,
    began to swell. Swellingsbuboes. In Greek.
    groinboubondisease name Bubonic plague.
  • Also named Black Death The Great Pestilence.
  • Italian traders blamed. Infected, return to
    Sicily. Plague spread to Sicily, then mainland
    Italy.
  • (Giblin, J.C. (1995). When plague strikes the
    Black Death, smallpox, AIDS. HarperCollins,
    11-12. Working Group on Civiliian Biodefense
    (2000). Plague as a biological weapon. JAMA,
    283(17), 2281.)

8
History of Bubonic Plague - 4
  • October 1347 Sicily -- Italy
  • Italian sailors ordered to stay on board. Did not
    know that carriers were black rats and fleas that
    lived in their hair. Plague spread to port of
    Messina, ports of mainland Italy, Milan,
    Florence, Venice ...
  • Splendid breeding ground garbage, garbage
  • Venice decree of quaranta giorni quarantine of
    sailors on ships for 40 days
  • Literary references Bocaccios Decameron.
  • By winter 1348-1349, 1/3-1/2 population of Italy
    killed.
  • (Giblin, J.C. (1995). When plague strikes the
    Black Death, smallpox, AIDS. HarperCollins,
    13-20.)

9
History of Bubonic Plague - 5
  • Sp. 1348 Marseilles-Avignon, France
  • Avignon Popes home. Pilgrims unknowingly
    brought plague.
  • Feb.-May 400 people/day, 1349 50,000-Paris
  • Pope Clement fire/humors (Hippocrates, Galen)
  • Church no dissection, autopsies. Humors/miasmas
    theories of Hippocrates, Galen.
  • Attributed plague to imbalance of humors
    miasmas.
  • Treatments bloodletting at site of buboes,
    prayer.
  • (Giblin, J.C. (1995). When plague strikes the
    Black Death, smallpox, AIDS. HarperCollins,
    21-25.)

10
History of Bubonic Plague - 6
  • Summer 1349-1351 British Isles and Germany
    early 1400s.
  • Plague killed up to 80 of some villages
  • Devastation led to vehement persecution and
    discrimination against people who were different
  • German Flagellant movement, 1st Holocaust,
    intense Anti-Semitism. Power of Church reduced
    (precursor to rise of Protestantism).
  • Epidemics in Europe about every 10 years to early
    1400s. Europe lost ½ of population.
  • (Giblin, J.C. (1995). When plague strikes the
    Black Death, smallpox, AIDS. HarperCollins,
    26-40.)

11
History of Bubonic Plague - 7
  • 15th-16th-17th Centuries
  • Reform of Catholic Church ---Protestantism
  • Medicine Practical courses in anatomy, surgery
  • Medical textbooks in European languages
  • Consumer health Scientific method Gutenberg
    (1456), Discovery of America (1492)
  • 1664-Fall 1665 Great Plague of London. 70,000
    died. Thought to be person to person
    transmission. Quarantines in homes.
  • (Giblin, J.C. (1995). When plague strikes the
    Black Death, smallpox, AIDS. HarperCollins,
    41-49.)

12
History of Bubonic Plague - 8
  • 18th-19th Centuries
  • By 1750, bubonic plague faded out in western
    Europe, though still active in Mediterranean.
  • 1855 pandemic in interior of China, to Canton
    and Hong Kong. Killed gt12 million people in India
    and China.
  • Medicine Work of Pasteur, Koch with bacteria.
  • 1894 Kitasato and Dr. Alexandre E.J. Yersin
    isolated and described the cause of plague. Dr.
    Yersin received the credit bacteria later named
    Yersinia pestis
  • (Giblin, J.C. (1995). When plague strikes the
    Black Death, smallpox, AIDS. HarperCollins,
    49-50. Yancey, D. (1994). The hunt for hidden
    killers ten cases of medical mystery.
    Brookfield, CT Millbrook Press, 61-71.)

13
History of Bubonic Plague - 9
  • 20th Century
  • 1900-1904 San Francisco outbreak 121 cases,118
    died
  • Person/person transmission Asian immigrants
    isolated.
  • Quarantine did not work scientists explanation
    accepted
  • Ships disinfected. Massive clean-up. Rats
    destroyed.
  • 1924-1925 Los Angeles outbreak 40 cases, 38
    died.
  • 1940s Development of antibiotics. Plague
    treatable.
  • By 1949 New Mexico U.S. leader in of plague
    cases
  • Threat if no antibiotics 9/94-India pneumonic
    plague
  • 1898-1920, 1991, 1995-1998 Madagascar epidemics
  • Dec. 1996 CDC MMWR Prevention of Plague Report
  • (Giblin, J.C. (1995), 50-51 Boisier (2002)
    Emerging Infectious Diseases McClain, C. Of
    Medicine, Race and American Law-1900)

14
History of Bubonic Plague - 10
  • 21st Century Today as we speak
  • November 7, 2002 CNN.com Bubonic plague
    suspected in New York City NYC Visitors
  • Nov. 9, 2002 New Mexico visitors to NYC
    diagnosed with bubonic plague still in hospital.
  • NYCs first case of bubonic plague in a century.
    (CDC, 2002)
  • Couple suspected of contracting plague from
    rodents on their property (Robin, 2002)
  • Plague as biological weapon (U.S. Working Group
    on Civilian Biodefense, JAMA (5/3/2000)
    Recommendations

15
History of Bubonic Plague - 11
  • 21st Century Today as we speak, continued
  • According to the World Health Organization
    (WHO), as of May 27, 2002, the Malawian Ministry
    of Health has reported a total of 71 cases of
    bubonic plague in the district of Nsanje since
    the onset of the outbreak on April 16, 2002. The
    outbreak has affected 26 villages - 23 in the
    Ndamera area, 2 in Chimombo, and 1 village in
    neighboring Mozambique.
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    National Center for Infectious Diseases.
    Travelers health outbreak of bubonic plague in
    Malawi, as of May 27, 2002. Retrieved November
    9, 2002, from http//www.cdc.gov/travel/other/plag
    ue-outbreak-malawi.htm.

16
History of Bubonic Plague - 12
  • 21st Century, Controversy, Outbreaks, heightened
    interest, terrorism ...
  • How to prepare for terrorism via plague
    (especially pneumonic). (Don't miss
    smallpox/plague outbreaks adapt strategies to
    track bioterrorism. ED management the monthly
    update on emergency department management. 2002
    Jan 14(1) 1-3.)
  • History of Bubonic Plague Was it really the
    plague, or scarlet fever, or ebola virus? ...
    Delta 32 gene mutation
  • Current Outbreaks NYC CDC Travelers Health
    Information on Plague (retrieved 11/9/2002)
    enzootic in wild rodent populations over large
    rural areas of the Americas, Africa, and Asia.
    Prophylactic measures antibiotics, insect
    repellants http//www.cdc.gov/travel/diseases/pl
    ague.htm PBS...

17
Agent Togavirus, genus Rubivirus, RNA virus
(isolated 1962 by Parkman and Weller)
Transmission Human to human respiratory
transmission. Replication in nasopharynx and
regional lymph nodes. Viremia (virus in
bloodstream) 5-7 days after exposure with spread
to tissues. Intrauterine placenta, fetus
affected during viremia.Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (2002). Rubella.
Retrieved November 16, 2002, from
http//www.cdc.gov/nip/publications/pink/rubella.p
df
Rubella / German Measles / Greggs Syndrome Virus
18
History of Rubella - 1
  • 1881 Officially recognized as a distinct
    clinical entity at international medical congress
    in London. Before that time, confusion as to
    whether it was a mild form of measles (rubeola)
    or scarlet fever, or both, and what it should be
    called.
  • The name rubella, first proposed in 1866,
    accepted.
  • In the next 60 years, little attention was paid
    to rubella since the disease was not considered
    serious and did not have serious complications.
  • (Horstmann, Dorothy M. (1986, Oct. 11). The
    rubella story, 1881-1985. South African Medical
    Journal, Supplement, 60-63.)

19
History of Rubella - 2
  • 1935 Epidemic of rubella, largely went
    unnoticed.
  • 1940 Large rubella epidemic in Australia.
  • 1941 Australian ophthalmologist Dr. Norman Gregg
    discovered relationship between maternal rubella
    during pregnancy and congenital defects in
    infants.
  • 1941 Dr. Gregg had observed in his practice in
    Sydney a rise in the number of infants born with
    cataracts. Found that the mothers of most of the
    infants had contracted rubella when they were in
    their first few months of pregnancy during the
    1940 epidemic.
  • Dr. Greggs colleagues also noticed numerous
    infants being born with cataracts, as well as
    infants born who were small in size, had failure
    to thrive, cardiac abnormalities, and
    microphthalmia an unnatural smallness of the
    eyes.
  • 1941 Dr. Gregg documented 78 cases of congenital
    rubella syndrome CRS and published a paper in
    the Transactions of the Ophthalmological Society
    of Australia
  • (Horstmann, Dorothy M. (1986, Oct. 11). The
    rubella story, 1881-1985. South African Medical
    Journal, Supplement, 60-63 Cooper, L.Z. (1966).
    German measles. Scientific American 215(7)
    30-37.)

20
History of Rubella - 3
  • 1941 Discovery of association between maternal
    rubella and newborns differences - profound
    impact on the entire field of congenital disease.
  • Rubella was the very first well defined
    teratogen an agent that causes developmental
    differences. Dr. Greggs findings were confirmed
    in other studies in Europe, the U.S., New
    Zealand, and Australia. The studies showed that
    many children born with differences were
    correlated with their mothers having a history of
    rubella.
  • (Horstmann, Dorothy M. (1986, Oct. 11). The
    rubella story, 1881-1985. South African Medical
    Journal, Supplement, 60-63. Parkman, P.D., Meyer,
    H.M., Jr., Hilleman, M.R. (1997, 2000). Vaccine
    developed for German measles, 1960-1969.
    DISCovering U.S. History. Gale Research.
    Retrieved September 16, 2002, from
    http//galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/SRCCE/.
    Cooper, L.Z. (1966). German measles. Scientific
    American 215(7) 30-37.)

21
History of Rubella - 4
  • 1941-1961 For twenty years, scientists tried to
    isolate the rubella virus, using experimental
    animals, but without success.
  • 1962 Drs. Parkman, Meyer, Hilleman at 3
    laboratories Walter Reed, Harvard, and NIH -
    isolated rubella virus. New standard of
    cooperation in medical research.
  • Early 1960s 40,000 and 45,000 cases of rubella
    per year.
  • (Horstmann, Dorothy M. (1986, Oct. 11). The
    rubella story, 1881-1985. South African Medical
    Journal, Supplement, 60-63. Parkman, P.D., Meyer,
    H.M., Jr., Hilleman, M.R. (1997, 2000). Vaccine
    developed for German measles, 1960-1969.
    DISCovering U.S. History. Gale Research.
    Retrieved September 16, 2002, from
    http//galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/SRCCE/.
    Cooper, L.Z. (1966). German measles. Scientific
    American 215(7) 30-37.)

22
History of Rubella - 5
  • Spring 1964 Large epidemic of rubella in the
    United States. 7,000 fetal deaths, 20,000 babies
    born with congenital differences. Investigators
    discovered very different virologies of rubella
    intra-uterine infection and the post-natal
    infection.
  • July 1966Pediatrician Louis Z. Cooper publishes
    German Measles, Scientific American.
  • By 1969, three rubella vaccines ready for
    licensing. HPV77 DE5 (via monkey kidney cells
    and duck embryo tissue cultures), the Cendehill
    strain (via rabbit kidney cells), and the RA27/3
    strain (isolated in human diploid cells).
    Rubella vaccines induce seroconversions in
    approximately 95 of susceptible individuals.
    The vaccine-induced infection is
    non-communicable. Viremia the existence of
    viral particles in the bloodstream occurs at
    such a low level that it is not easily detected.
  • (Horstmann, Dorothy M. (1986, Oct. 11). The
    rubella story, 1881-1985. South African Medical
    Journal, Supplement, 60-63. Parkman, P.D., Meyer,
    H.M., Jr., Hilleman, M.R. (1997, 2000). Vaccine
    developed for German measles, 1960-1969.
    DISCovering U.S. History. Gale Research.
    Retrieved September 16, 2002, from
    http//galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/SRCCE/.
    Cooper, L.Z. (1966). German measles. Scientific
    American 215(7) 30-37.)

23
History of Rubella - 6
  • 1969 - Beginning of rubella vaccination programs
    in US, UK, Australia,New Zealand.
  • US/other nations different approaches target
    populations for immunization.
  • U.S. focus on children who had not yet reached
    puberty, both boys and girls, 1 year and older.
    Goal to protect the age group in which most
    infections occurred. This way, it was reasoned,
    women who are pregnant would avoid being exposed
    to the infection. For the U.S. approach, a very
    high herd immunity in the population most greatly
    affected young children, was necessary.
    Identification and immunization of women of
    child-bearing age also was recommended.
  • In the United Kingdom, Europe, and Australia, the
    immunization program begun in 1970 was limited to
    girls, usually between 10-14 years of age and to
    susceptible women. Thought that incidence of the
    congenital disease would not be reduced until the
    mid-1980s.
  • (Horstmann, Dorothy M. (1986, Oct. 11). The
    rubella story, 1881-1985. South African Medical
    Journal, Supplement, 60-63. Parkman, P.D., Meyer,
    H.M., Jr., Hilleman, M.R. (1997, 2000). Vaccine
    developed for German measles, 1960-1969.
    DISCovering U.S. History. Gale Research.
    Retrieved September 16, 2002, from
    http//galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/SRCCE/.
    Cooper, L.Z. (1966). German measles. Scientific
    American 215(7) 30-37.)

24
History of Rubella - 7
  • 1989 Eradication of rubella goal of Healthy
    People 2000.
  • 1988-1991 Reduction in rubella cases 98 since
    pre-vaccination era. However, 2-3 fold increase
    in incidence of rubella since 1982 (JAMA, 1991)
  • 1990 1093 cases from 38 states,DC. California
    4x.
  • 2002 CDC U.S. on verge of eradication of
    indigenous rubella. Rubella occurs mainly among
    foreign-born Hispanic adults who are either
    unvaccinated or whose vaccination status is
    unknown
  • 1998-2002 Controversy MMR vaccine causes
    autism?
  • November 7, 2002 Publication of Danish study
    showing no link between administration of MMR
    vaccine and autism.
  • November 19, 2002 Threats due to lack of
    vaccination in other countries, threats due to
    terrorism?
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    National Center for Health Statistics (1999).
    Healthy people 2000 progress review objective
    charts. Increase in rubella and congenital
    rubella. (1991, March 6). JAMA, The Journal of
    the American Medical Association, 265(9),
    1076-1077.(Rubella almost eradicated in the
    United States. (2002, 5 February). Virus Weekly.
    Retrieved September 16, 2002 from, General
    Reference Center Gold. Madsen K. M., Hviid A.,
    Vestergaard M., Schendel D., Wohlfahrt J.,
    Thorsen P., Olsen J., Melbye M. (2000, November
    7). A population-based study of measles, mumps,
    and rubella vaccination and autism. New England
    Journal of Medicine, 347, 1477-1482.

25
II.Symptoms of The Bubonic Plague and
Rubella
26
Symptoms of the DiseaseBubonic Plague
Symptoms
  • Bubonic plague enlarged, tender lymph nodes
    (buboes), fever, chills, prostration,
    gastrointestinal symptoms
  • Septicemic plague fever, chills, prostration,
    abdominal pain, shock and bleeding into skin and
    other organs
  • Pneumonic plague fever, chills, cough and
    difficulty breathing rapid shock and death if
    not treated early
  • (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC
    plague fact sheet. Retrieved October 22, 2002,
    from http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/plague/facts.
    htm)

27
Symptoms of the DiseaseRubella Symptoms - 1
  • Rubella is a mild, highly contagious illness
    that is caused by a virus. It is characterized by
    a rash, swollen glands and, especially in adults,
    joint pain. The rash usually lasts about three
    days and may be accompanied by a low fever. Other
    symptoms such as headache, loss of appetite and
    sore throat are more common in infected adults
    and teenagers than in children. Sometimes there
    are no symptoms at all.
  • Rubella is caused by a different virus from the
    one that causes regular measles (rubeola).
    Immunity to rubella does not protect a person
    from measles, or vice versa.
  • National Institutes of Health. National
    Toxicology Program (NTP). Center for the
    Evaluation of Risks to Human Reproduction
    CERHR. Rubella (German measles) 5/24/02).
    Retrieved October 23, 2002, from
    http//cerhr.niehs.nih.gov/genpub/topics/rubella-c
    cae.html.

28
Symptoms of the DiseaseRubella Symptoms - 2
  • Rubella is a mild illness which may present few
    or no symptoms. Symptoms may include a rash,
    slight fever, joint aches, headache, discomfort,
    runny nose and reddened eyes. The lymph nodes
    just behind the ears and at the back of the neck
    may swell, causing some soreness and/or pain. The
    rash, which may be itchy, first appears on the
    face and progresses from head to foot, lasting
    about three days. As many as half of all rubella
    cases occur without a rash. The incubation period
    for rubella is 12-23 days in most cases,
    symptoms appear within 16-18 days.
  • (New York State Department of Health.
    Communicable disease fact sheet rubella.
    Retrieved October 23, 2002, from
    http//www.health.state.ny.us/nysdoh/consumer/rube
    lla.htm)

29
Symptoms of the DiseaseRubella Symptoms - 3
  • Rubella, lasts less than two weeks in children.
  • Symptoms swollen glands, a low fever, transient
    three-day rash.
  • In women who are pregnant, the infection can pass
    to the developing fetus, especially during the
    first trimester of pregnancy, causing severe
    injuries to the fetus/newborn.
  • Approximately 15-20 of women who are pregnant
    who acquire German measles during the first
    trimester give birth to infants with heart
    defects (50), deafness (50), eye defects and
    blindness (40), mental retardation (40), blood
    defects such anemia and bleeding (30), bone
    lesions, enlarged liver, enlarged spleen, and
    hand abnormalities.
  • About 10 of infants born with congenital rubella
    syndrome CRS die, while severe infections
    result in spontaneous abortion.
  • Greatest period of virulence first two months of
    pregnancy. Studies show that 50 of women
    infected during the first month of pregnancy gave
    births to babies with a host of differences. If
    women infected in 3rd month, 10 of infants have
    these differences. Infection after 4th month
    cause less severe differences in the fetus.
    (Parkman, Meyer, Hilleman, 1997, 2000).

30
III.Causative Agents and how they were
determinedThe Bubonic Plague and Rubella
31
Causative Agent Bubonic Plague (Bacterium
Yersinia pestis) - 1
Source CDC Public Health Image Library, Image
2117 URL http//phil.cdc.gov/Phil/detail.asp?id2
117 (image in public domain) CDC Description
Yersinia (Pasteurella) pestis causes plague in
animals and humans. People usually get plague
from being bitten by a rodent flea that is
carrying the plague bacterium, or by handling an
infected animal.
32
Causative Agent Bubonic Plague(Bacterium
Yersinia pestis) - 2
  • Plague is an infectious disease of animals and
    humans caused by the bacteriumYersinia pestis.
    The fundamental but separate works by Yersin and
    Kitasato in 1894 on the discovery of the
    etiologic agent of plague in Hong Kong opened the
    way for investigating the disease and how it is
    spread. Kitasato and Yersin described, within
    days of each others findings, the presence of
    bipolar staining organisms in the swollen lymph
    node (bubo), blood, lungs, liver and spleen of
    dead patients. (Bibel et al., 1976).

33
Causative Agent Bubonic Plague(Bacterium
Yersinia Pestis) - 2
  • Cultures isolated from patient specimens were
    inoculated into a variety of laboratory animals,
    including mice. These animals died within days
    after injection, and the same bacilli as those
    found in patient specimens were present in the
    animal organs. Though both investigators reported
    their findings, Yersin was accepted as the
    primary discoverer of the organism now named
    after him, Yersinia pestis

34
Causative Agent Bubonic Plague(Bacterium
Yersinia pestis) - 3
  • Yersin had recorded that rats were affected by
    plague not only during plague epidemics but also
    often preceding such epidemics in humans. In
    fact, plague was designated, in local languages,
    as a disease of the rats villagers in China,
    India and Formosa (Taiwan) described that when
    hundreds and thousands of rats lie dead in and
    out of houses, plague outbreaks in people soon
    followed (Gross, 1995).

35
Causative Agent Bubonic Plague(Bacterium
Yersinia pestis) - 4
  • Simond described transmission of plague in 1898.
    Persons who became ill did not have to be in
    close contact with each other to acquire the
    disease. Simond observed residents of China and
    Formosa being frightened of dead rats and viewing
    these rats as a risk for developing plague.
    Simond suspected that the flea might be an
    intermediary factor in the transmission of
    plague. People were infected with plague only if
    they were in contact with recently dead rats.
    They were not infected if they touched rats that
    were dead for more than 24 hours. Simond
    demonstrated that the rat flea (Xenopsylla
    cheopis) transmitted the disease in an experiment
    in which a healthy rat, separated from direct
    contact with a recently plague-killed rat, died
    of plague after the infected fleas jumped from
    the first rat to the second. Centers for Disease
    Control and Prevention. Division of Vector-Borne
    Infectious Diseases. The plague natural history.
    Retrieved October 22, 2002 from
    http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/plague/history.htm

36
Causative Agent Rubella(Togavirus, genus
Rubivirus)
Source CDC Public Health Image Library, Image
269 URL http//phil.cdc.gov/Phil/detail.asp?id26
9 CDC Description Transmission electron
micrograph of rubella virus (1981) image in
public domain
37
Causative Agent Rubella (Togavirus, genus
Rubivirus) - 1
  • Rubella as a separate entity not identified until
    1881. Thought to be scarlet fever or measles.
  • Identity and severity discounted until 1941 since
    mild symptoms.
  • 1941 Dr. Norman McAlister Gregg in Australia
    discovered maternal-fetus intrauterine
    transmission.
  • General agreement that rubella caused by virus
    based on its incubation period (12-23 days),
    clinical course (symptoms appear 16-18 days), and
    lack of response to antibiotics. (Cooper, 1966,
    32. NYS Dept. of Health, 2002, Rubella, 2002)
  • 1941-1961 Unsuccessful attempts using
    experimental animals to isolate rubella virus.
  • The rubella epidemic (1960s). (1998, 2000).
    American Decades CD-ROM. Gale Research. Retrieved
    November 15, 2002, from Student Resource Center
    College Edition database, http//galenet.galegroup
    .com/servlet/SRCCE.

38
Causative Agent Rubella (Togavirus, genus
Rubivirus) - 2
  • 1960-1962 Isolation of virus at 3 labs Drs.
    Paul Parkman and Edward L. Buescher, Walter Reed
    Army Institute for Research Drs. Thomas Weller
    and Franklin Neva at Harvard University Drs.
    John L. Sever and Gilbert M. Schiff at the
    National Institutes of Health NIH. Upon
    moving to NIH, Dr. Parkman worked with Dr. Harry
    M. Meyer on finding a way to curb the growth of
    the virus. They were responsible for developing
    the first test the hemaglutination-inhibition
    test - that could determine a persons immunity
    to the rubella virus. This test could provide
    results in three hours, rather than the three
    weeks required via an older testing method.
  • Investigators discovered very different
    virologies of the rubella intra-uterine infection
    and the post-natal infection just in time for
    1963-1965 major U.S. rubella epidemic. The
    rubella epidemic (1960s). (1998, 2000). American
    Decades CD-ROM. Gale Research. Retrieved November
    15, 2002, from Student Resource Center College
    Edition database, http//galenet.galegroup.com/ser
    vlet/SRCCE. Cooper, 1966).

39
IV. How Diseases Spread The Bubonic
PlagueandRubella
40
How Disease Spread Bubonic Plague - 1
  • Zoonotic infectious disease spread principally by
    reservoir of infected rats, shrews, prairie dogs,
    and other mammals.
  • Vector Rat flea

Source CDC (in public domain) URL
http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod/ dvbid/plague/cheob6x4.h
tm CDC Description Male Xenopsylla cheopis
(oriental rat flea) engorged with blood. This
flea is the primary vector of plague in most
large plague epidemics in Asia, Africa, and South
America. Both male and female fleas can transmit
the infection.
41
How Disease SpreadBubonic Plague - 2
  • People usually bitten by rodent flea carrying the
    plague bacterium, Yersinia pestis, or by handling
    an infected animal.
  • Homes, places of work have flea-infested rats.
    Even with modern antibiotics, infected person is
    not treated promptly, the disease can cause
    illness or death.
  • Wild rodents in certain areas around world
    infected with plague. Outbreaks in people still
    occur in rural communities or in cities usually
    associated with infected rats, fleas that live in
    the home.  
  • (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC
    Plague Home Page, 2002)

42
How Disease SpreadBubonic Plague - 3
  • In U.S., last urban plague epidemic 1924-25 Los
    Angeles. Since then, in U.S., mostly scattered
    cases in rural areas (10-15 persons/year).
  • Globally, the World Health Organization 1,000 to
    3,000 cases of plague every year.
  • North America, plague in certain animals and
    their fleas Pacific Coast to Great Plains, S.W.
    Canada to Mexico.
  • U.S. most human cases 1) northern New Mexico,
    northern Arizona, and southern Colorado and 2)
    California, southern Oregon, far western Nevada.
  • Also in Africa, Asia, and South America (see
    map).
  • (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC
    Plague Home Page, 2002)

43
How Disease SpreadBubonic Plague - 4
  • Natural cycle in its enzootic environment,
    involving small mammals and fleas without human
    involvement.
  • Quiescent periods, during which few or no human
    cases are detected, may last for years, leading
    to mistaken declarations of plague eradication.
  • However long the silent periods last, plague may
    suddenly reappear. The combination of false
    assurance of its eradication, and the failure of
    public health vigilance, sets the stage for the
    panic that may ensue when enzootic plague changes
    from its natural cycle into rodent and flea
    populations near where people live.
  • Poor sanitation, overcrowding, high numbers of
    rodents are conditions that enhance urban plague
    transmission.  
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases. The
    plague natural history. Retrieved October 22,
    2002 from http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/plague/
    history.htm

44
How Disease SpreadBubonic Plague - 5
  • Controversy as to whether etiology was the same
    for all outbreaks of the plague
  • Because of the limits inherent in historical
    sources on ancient plague epidemics, many
    questions concerning their etiology and
    epidemiology remain unanswered. Molecular biology
    tools and the use of dental pulp as a preserved
    source of bacterial DNA enabled us to demonstrate
    that Yersinia pestis was the etiologic agent of
    the 1347 European Black Death and of two
    additional epidemics in 1590 and 1722 in southern
    France.
  • (Drancourt, M. Raoult, D. (2002, January).
    Molecular insights into the history of plague.
    Microbes and Infection / Institut Pasteur, 4(1)
    105-9.)

45
How Disease SpreadBubonic Plague - 6
  • Controversy as to whether etiology was the same
    for all outbreaks of the plague The primary
    hypotheses raised by the author, a medieval
    historian, are that
  • the Black Death of the 13th and 14th centuries
    was not the same disease as the rat-based bubonic
    plague of the 19th century whose Yersinia pestis
    agent was first cultured in Hong Kong in 1894
  • Unlike populations of Western Europe who adapted
    to the pathogen of the Black Death at least for
    the first hundred years, humans do not have
    immunity for the modern bubonic plague.
  • The hypotheses are based on the findings that the
    two diseases were different in their signs,
    symptoms, and epidemiologies. ...
  • (Cohn, S.K., Jr. (2002, June). The Black Death
    end of a paradigm. American Historical Review,
    107(3) 703-738. Retrieved October 27, 2002, from
    Ebscohost database.)

46
How Disease SpreadRubella - 1
  • Rubella caused by togavirus that is spread from
    person to person when an infected person coughs
    or sneezes.
  • Rubella also spread by direct contact with the
    nasal or throat secretions of an infected person.
    If a pregnant woman gets rubella during the first
    3 months of pregnancy, her baby is at risk of
    having serious birth defects or dying.
  • Highly contagious. High herd immunity required,
    85-90
  •  National Coalition for Adult Immunization.
    (2002). Facts about rubella for adults.
    Retrieved October 23, 2002, from
    http//www.nfid.org/factsheets/rubellaadult.html

47
How Disease SpreadRubella - 2
  • Congenital rubella being highly contagious also
    increases its virulence because affected newborns
    can infect others with the virus up to a year
    after birth.
  • In a hospital setting, newborns with congenital
    rubella syndrome CRS can infect hospital
    personnel, other newborns, and other women who
    are pregnant and visitors to the hospital, very
    much compounding the spread of the virus.
  • Parkman, P.D., Meyer, H.M., Jr., Hilleman, M.R.
    (1997, 2000). Vaccine developed for German
    measles, 1960-1969. In DISCovering U.S. History.
    Gale Research. Retrieved September 16, 2002,
    from Student Resource Center College Edition
    database at http//galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/S
    RCCE/
  •  

48
V. Mechanisms of Containment The Bubonic
PlagueandRubella
49
Mechanisms of ContainmentBubonic Plague - 1
  • OPPORTUNITIES
  • Increased self-sufficiency of state and county
    public health labs
  • Expanded active surveillance through carnivore
    serosurveys and application of geographic
    information systems (GIS) to surveillance
    programs
  • Increased education of public and health
    professionals
  • Collaborative applied research on plague
    prevention and control with other federal, state,
    and local health agencies, including application
    of GIS to surveillance
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC
    plague fact sheet. Retrieved October 22, 2002,
    from http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/plague/facts.
    htm

50
Mechanisms of ContainmentBubonic Plague - 2
  • RESEARCH
  • Ecology-based prevention and control strategies
  • Improved diagnostic reagents and methods
  • Development of potential vaccine candidates
  • Risk factor identification using landscape
    ecology and epidemiology
  • CDC (2002). CDC plague fact sheet. Retrieved
    October 22, 2002, from http//www.cdc.gov/ncidod/d
    vbid/plague/facts.htm
  • PRACTICE
  • People refrain from contact with rodents,
    especially if population known to be infected
  • People use insect repellant when outside in areas
    with potential for having vectors and/or hosts.
  • People wear proper attire to protect selves.

51
Mechanisms of ContainmentRubella - 1
  • Vaccination
  • In 1969, three rubella vaccines ready for
    licensing
  • HPV77 DE5 (via monkey kidney cells and duck
    embryo tissue cultures)
  • Cendehill strain (via rabbit kidney cells), and
  • RA27/3 strain (isolated in human diploid cells.)
  • Rubella vaccines induce seroconversions in
    approximately 95 of susceptible individuals.
    The vaccine-induced infection is
    non-communicable. Viraemia the existence of
    viral particles in the bloodstream occurs at
    such a low level that it is not easily detected.
  • (New York State Department of Health. (2002).
    Communicable disease fact sheet rubella.
    Retrieved October 23, 2002, from
    http//www.health.state.ny.us/nysdoh/consumer/rube
    lla.htm)

52
Mechanisms of ContainmentRubella - 2
  • Vaccination
  • Rubella vaccine is given on or after a child's
    first birthday, and is usually given in
    combination with measles and mumps (MMR) vaccine.
    Children usually receive the first dose between
    12 and 15 months or age and the second dose prior
    to school entry are 4-6 years of age.
  • (New York State Department of Health. (2002).
    Communicable disease fact sheet rubella.
    Retrieved October 23, 2002, from
    http//www.health.state.ny.us/nysdoh/consumer/rube
    lla.htm)

53
Mechanisms of ContainmentRubella - 2
  • Vaccination
  • U.S. followed a different rubella immunization
    strategy than did nations in Europe, Australia,
    and the United Kingdom. In the U.S., the focus
    of immunizations was on children who had not yet
    reached puberty, both boys and girls, 1 year and
    older. The goal was to protect the age group in
    which most infections occurred. This way, it was
    reasoned, women who are pregnant would avoid
    being exposed to the infection. For the U.S.
    approach, a very high herd immunity in the
    population most greatly affected young
    children, was necessary. Identification and
    immunization of women of child-bearing age also
    was recommended.
  • Horstmann, Dorothy M. (1986, October 11). The
    rubella story, 1881-1985. South African Medical
    Journal, Supplement, 60-63.

54
Mechanisms of ContainmentRubella - 3
  • Vaccination
  • In the United Kingdom, Europe, and Australia, the
    immunization program begun in 1970 was limited to
    girls, usually between 10-14 years of age and to
    susceptible women. It was thought that the
    incidence of the congenital disease would not be
    reduced until the mid-1980s. Horstmann, Dorothy
    M. (1986, October 11). The rubella story,
    1881-1985. South African Medical Journal,
    Supplement, 60-63.
  • During 2000, 87 of all reported cases of rubella
    occurred among people 15-39 years of age. As many
    as 8 million women of childbearing age are
    susceptible to rubella. Up to 10 of young adults
    are susceptible to the rubella virus. National
    Coalition for Adult Immunization. (2002). Facts
    about rubella for adults. Retrieved October 23,
    2002, from http//www.nfid.org/factsheets/rubellaa
    dult.html

55
Mechanisms of ContainmentRubella - 4
  • Maintaining high levels of rubella immunization
    in the community is critical to controlling the
    spread of the disease. Control of the spread of
    rubella is needed primarily to prevent the birth
    defects caused by CRS. Therefore, women of
    childbearing age should have their immunity
    determined and receive rubella vaccine if needed.
    Infected children should not attend school during
    their infectious period.
  • (New York State Department of Health.
    Communicable Disease Fact Sheet. Rubella.
    Retrieved October 23, 2002, from
    http//www.health.state.ny.us/nysdoh/consumer/rube
    lla.htm)

56
Mechanisms of ContainmentRubella - 5
  • Caution re vaccination programs
  • According to the World Health Organization, two
    cautions variability of the epidemiology of the
    rubella infection and the need to achieve and
    sustain very high coverage to avoid the potential
    increase in CRS. Immunization increases the
    average age at infection, and if coverage is not
    high enough to reduce rubella transmission close
    to zero, there could be a paradoxical increase in
    CRS incidence in the presence of an immunization
    program.
  • (World Health Organization. Vaccines,
    Immunization and Biologicals Rubella vaccine.
    Retrieved October 23, 2002, from
    http//www.who.int/vaccines/en/rubella.shtml)

57
Mechanisms of ContainmentRubella - 6
  • MMR Autism Link Controversy 1998-2002
  • February 28, 1998 British study Early report
    published in Lancet by Andrew Wakefield, Royal
    Free and University College Medical School
  • (Wakefield AJ, Murch SH, Linnell AAJ, Casson DM,
    Malik M, Berelowitz M, et al. (1998, February
    28). Ileal-lymphoid-nodular hyperplasia,
    non-specific colitis and pervasive developmental
    disorder in children. Lancet, 351(9103), 637-41.
    ). Retrieved November 16, 2002, from EBSCOHost
    Academic Search Premier database.)
  • May be a link between the measles, mumps, and
    rubella MMR vaccination and inflammatory bowel
    disease/autism.
  • Each side had its supporters. Websites
  • Researcher lost position at University because of
    controversy,
  • (Ramsey, S. (2001, December 8). Controversial
    MMR-autism investigator resigns from research
    post. Lancet, 358(9297). Retrieved November 16,
    2002, from EBSCOHost Academic Search Premier
    database.)

58
Mechanisms of ContainmentRubella - 7
  • MMR Autism Link Controversy
  • Claims on anti-vaccination websites
  • vaccines cause idiopathic illness (100 of sites)
  • vaccines erode immunity (95)
  • adverse vaccine reactions underreported (95)
  • vaccination policy is motivated by profit (91)
  • links to other anti-vaccination sites (100)
  • information for legally avoiding immunizations
    (64)
  • emotionally charged stories of children who had
    allegedly been killed or harmed by vaccines
    (55).
  • (Wolfe, L.K., Sharp, M., Lipsky, M. (2002, June
    26). Content and design attributes of
    anti-vaccination web sites (brief report). JAMA
    The Journal of the American Medical Association,
    287(24), 3245-3249.)

59
Mechanisms of ContainmentRubella - 8
  • In 1986, the U.S. Congress passed the National
    Childhood Vaccine Injury Act that established the
    National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program
    (VICP), a federal system to compensate
    individuals or families injured by childhood
    vaccines, claims for severe shock, paralytic
    polio, and brain damage.
  • A physician from the YSDHHS reviews claims, then
    claims are decided in federal court.
  • Act also established the Vaccine Adverse
    Reporting System (VAERS) to which anyone can
    report a suspected reaction to any vaccine. Act
    also provided for increased communication about
    risks from immunizations. The Institute of
    Medicine established a Vaccine Safety Ctte. to
    study risks of childhood vaccines. (Hyde, M.O.,
    Forsythe, E.H. (2000). Vaccinations from
    smallpox to cancer. New York Franklin Watts, 66.)

60
Mechanisms of ContainmentRubella - 9
  • MMR Autism Link Controversy
  • German measles-rubella vaccine is a live
    attenuated vaccine made from live but weakened
    microbes. The microbes are weakened by growing
    them under special conditions in tissue cultures
    in the laboratory. The vaccine stimulates the
    immune system more strongly than do inactivated
    vaccines (made from killed bacteria or viruses
    that have been inactivated by chemicals or heat).
    People usually need only one booster. Once the
    rubella vaccine is injected, weakened microbes
    from a live vaccine can change into a virulent
    form, so that live vaccines are not given to
    pregnant women or people with damaged immune
    systems such as people with HIV, cancer, or
    people who take medications that suppress their
    immune systems.
  • (Offit, P.A., Bell, L.M. (1998). What every
    parent should know about vaccines. New York
    Macmillan, 70-72.)

61
Mechanisms of ContainmentRubella - 10
  • CDC Autism Link Controversy (last word)
  • While rubella is usually mild in children and
    adults, up to 90 percent of infants born to
    mothers infected with rubella during the first
    trimester of pregnancy will develop congenital
    rubella syndrome (CRS), resulting in heart
    defects, cataracts, mental retardation, and
    deafness. In 1964-1965, before rubella
    immunization was used routinely in the U.S.,
    there was an epidemic of rubella that resulted in
    an estimated 20,000 infants born with CRS, with
    2,100 neonatal deaths and 11,250 miscarriages. Of
    the 20,000 infants born with CRS,11,600 were
    deaf, 3,580 were blind, and 1,800 were mentally
    retarded.Due to the widespread use of rubella
    vaccine, only six CRS cases were provisionally
    reported in the U.S. in 2000. Because many
    developing countries do not include rubella in
    the childhood immunization schedule, many of
    these cases occurred in foreign-born adults.
    Since 1996, greater than 50 percent of the
    reported rubella cases have been among adults.
    Since 1999, there have been 40 pregnant women
    infected with rubella. If we stopped rubella
    immunization, immunity to rubella would decline
    and rubella would once again return, resulting in
    pregnant women becoming infected with rubella and
    then giving birth to infants with CRS.
  • (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    Rubella (German measles) What would happen if we
    stopped vaccinations? Retrieved October 26, 2002,
    from http//www.cdc.gov/nip/publications/fs/gen/Wh
    atIfStop.htmRubella)

62
VI. Percentage of FatalitiesThe Bubonic
PlagueandRubella
63
Fatalities Bubonic Plague - 1
  • Bubonic plague most common form of U.S. cases
    80-90. Case Fatality Rate if not treated
    50-60
  • Septicemic plague when Yersinia pestis invades
    and continues to multiply in the bloodstream
    primary or secondary to bubonic plague. U.S.
    1947-1977 10 septicemic. Case fatality
    rate-50. Complications septic shock,
    consumptive coagulopathy, meningitis, coma.
  • Pneumonic plague least common but most dangerous
    and fatal form - inhalation of infectious
    respiratory droplets. Incubation period 1-3
    days. Without treatment, death within 18 hours
    after onset of respuratory symptoms. (Centers for
    Disease Control and Prevention (1996). Prevention
    of plague recommendations of the Advisory
    Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).
    Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 45(RR-14)
    1-15.

64
Fatalities Bubonic Plague - 2
  • The Bubonic Plague was called Black Death
    because black sores appeared on the skins of
    victims. The first record of plague was in
    Athens in 430 B.C. The most famous outbreak of
    plague was in in 14th century Asia and Europe,
    killing up to 25 of the population. Te plague
    continued to devastate Europe until the late 17th
    century. Plague doctors wore protective
    clothing (their long beak was filled with
    antiseptic substances). But the plague killed all
    who caught it. Some people were buried alive,
    with their gums having turned red and their skin
    pale. Stories of vampires were common.
  • The bubonic plague bacillus Yersinia pestis
    carried by fleas of black rats. It is thought to
    have originated in the Himalayas. As early
    humans migrated to Asia, the rats moved to these
    areas and then Europe to find food. The plague
    exists today but now victims have 50 survival
    rate.
  • (Roden, K. (1996). Plague. Brookfield, CT Copper
    Beech Books, 11.)

65
Percentage of Fatalities Rubella - 1
  • Rubella Epidemic of 1964-1965 in U.S.
  • 12.5 million rubella cases
  • 2,000 encephalitis cases
  • 11,250 surgical or spontaneous abortions
  • 2,100 nronatal deaths
  • 20,000 cases of Congenital Rubella Syndrome-CRS
  • CRS Possibly all organs affected fetal death.
    Infants infected in 1st trimester 85 affected
  • CRS causes deafness, cataracts, blidness, heart
    defects, microcepaly, mental retardation, bome
    alterations, liver and spleen damage
  • (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    (2002). Rubella. Retrieved November 16, 2002,
    from http//www.cdc.gov/nip/publications/pink/rube
    lla.pdf)

66
Percentage of Fatalities Rubella - 2
  • 2002 Current Congenital Rubella Syndrome CRS
    Incidence
  • 0.5-2.2 per 1000 live births in developing
    countries during epidemics (every 4-7 years)
  • High susceptibility in these countries 25
  • 1996 estimate for CRS in developing countries
    110,000 cases
  • Hinman, A.R., Irons, B., Lewis, M., Kandola, K.
    (2002, April). Economic analyses of rubella and
    rubella vaccines a global review. Bulletin of
    the World Health Organization, 80(4), 264-271.
    Retrieved September 16, 2002, from Infotrac
    General Reference Center Gold database.

67
VII. TreatmentsThe Bubonic
PlagueandRubella
68
Treatments Bubonic Plague - 1
  • In medieval times bloodletting at site of
    buboes, prayer
  • Fire-to keep away rats-used by Pope Clement
  • Strict isolation.
  • Antibiotics (resistant to bacterium).
  • Maintenance of sanitary conditions.
  • Pneumonic plague gas masks?

69
Treatments Bubonic Plague - 2
  • CDC Travelers warning
  • Travelers considered to be at high risk for
    plague because of unavoidable exposures in active
    epizootic or epidemic areas should be advised to
    consider antibiotic chemoprophylaxis with
    tetracycline or doxycycline during periods of
    exposure. Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole is an
    acceptable substitute for use in infants and in
    children younger than 8 years of age. Personal
    protective measures should also be recommended,
    including the use of insect repellents containing
    N,N-diethylmetatoluamide (DEET) on skin and
    clothing. Clothing also can be treated with
    insecticidal sprays containing permethrin.
    Travelers should be advised to avoid sick or dead
    animals or rodent nests and burrows. Whenever
    possible, travelers should also avoid visiting
    areas that have experienced recent plague
    epidemics or epizootics. Travelers are unlikely
    to be at high risk for plague while staying in
    modern accommodations.
  • (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    National Center for Infectious Diseases.
    Travelers health plague. Retrieved November 16,
    2002, from http//www.cdc.gov/travel/diseases/plag
    ue.htm)

70
Treatments Rubella
  • There is no specific treatment for congenital
    rubella syndrome. Certain problems that are
    common in the newborn period-such as blood and
    liver abnormalities-usually go away without
    treatment. Other individual birth defects-such as
    eye or heart defects-can sometimes be corrected
    or at least improved with early surgery. Babies
    with hearing or vision loss benefit from special
    education programs that provide early stimulation
    and build communication and learning skills.
    Children with mental retardation also benefit
    from early special education. Children with
    multiple differences may require early
    intervention from a team of experts.
  • National Institutes of Health. National
    Toxicology Program (NTP). Center for the
    Evaluation of Risks to Human Reproduction
    CERHR. Rubella (German measles) 5/24/02).
    Retrieved October 23, 2002, from
    http//cerhr.niehs.nih.gov/genpub/topics/rubella-c
    cae.html

71
VIII. Advice about Avoiding Further
OutbreaksThe Bubonic PlagueandRubella
72
Advice about avoiding further outbreaks of
Bubonic Plague - 1
  • Peace ( Dr. Wiginton stays home).
  • Good sanitation and hygiene.
  • Avoid rodents, reservoirs of flea vectors.
  • Be alert to deaths of populations of rats
    population and other animals.
  • Apply insect repellent and wear protective
    clothing in potentially affected areas.
  • Public awareness about types of plague.

73
Advice about avoiding further outbreaks of
Bubonic Plague - 2
  • CDC Travelers Warning
  • Plague is a zoonosis involving rodents and
    their fleas Plague continues to be enzootic in
    wild rodent populations over large areas of the
    Americas, Africa, and Asia, with occasional
    outbreaks among commensal rodents (those rodents
    living a symbiotic life with humans) in villages
    and small towns. Wild rodent plague poses a real,
    though limited risk to people.
  • (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    Travelers' health information plague. Retrieved
    November 9, 2002, from http//www.cdc.gov/travel/d
    iseases/plague.htm)

74
Advice about avoiding further outbreaks of
Bubonic Plague - 3
  • To investigate and stop spread, must seek out
    anyone who was in contact even casually with
    victim.
  • Treatment antibiotics. Possible source if
    victim hunter, has pets (if let fleas-infested
    dog sleep on bed) - if show symptoms within week
    or two.
  • Animal carriers of fleas some can remain
    healthy. If set traps, animals probably died.
    Then need to find fleas (i.e. in burrows) and do
    flea eradication program.
  • In 1992 alone, at least ten cases of plague
    reported. Plague-infested rodents, such as
    chipmunks and mice, probably more numerous in
    North America today than were in Europe at time
    of Black Death.
  • (Yancey, D. (1994). The hunt for hidden killers
    ten cases of medical mystery. Brookfield, CT
    Millbrook Press, 61-71.)

75
Advice about avoiding further outbreaks of
Rubella - 1
  • Effort WHO to establish national
    vaccination/immunization programs for rubella in
    all countries according to their needs. Need for
    cost benefit analyses re rubella (WHO. Economic
    analyses , 2002)
  • In U.S., special outreach to women of Hispanic
    ethnicity in Spanish, and to other women in
    their native languages (CRS prevention)
  • Immediate quarantine of people diagnosed as
    having rubella (although may be too late).
  • Comprehensive surveillance of immunization
    programs
  • Continued public awareness campaigns to encourage
    MMR immunizations and promotion of information on
    safety of MMR vaccines.

76
Advice about avoiding further outbreaks of
Rubella - 2
  • CDC Travelers Warning
  • Rubella occurs worldwide, and the risk of
    exposure to rubella outside the United States can
    be high. Few countries routinely use rubella
    vaccine, so rubella remains a common disease in
    many countries in the world.
  • (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    Travelers' health information on rubella.
    Retrieved November 9, 2002, from
    http//www.cdc.gov/travel/diseases/rubella.htm)
  • Public awareness about differabilities and
    accessibility issues. Equity of access for
    people with differabilities.

77
IX. Differences and SimiliaritiesThe Bubonic
PlagueandRubella
78
Differences Bubonic Plague (BP) and Rubella (R)
  • BP agent bacteria \ R Agent togavirus
  • BP zoonotic carriers \ R person to person
  • BP antibiotic treatment \ R vaccination
  • BP severe symptoms \ R mild symptoms
  • BP infection touch/inhalation / R also
    intrauterine in which severe consequences
  • BP bacterium isolated 1864 \ R virus 1962
  • BP incubation 2-6 days/R incubation12-23 days
  • BP symptoms apparent \ R symptoms sometimes
    inapparent or mistaken for other diseases

79
Similarities Bubonic Plague (BP) and Rubella (R)
  • BP R
  • Symptoms swelling of lymph nodes
  • Exanthem diseases causing skin eruptions
  • Transmittable via inhalation. Highly contagious.
  • Epidemics have caused mass panic
  • BP infection touch/inhalation / R also
    intrauterine
  • BP bacterium isolated 1864 \ R virus 1962
  • BP incubation \ R incubation 12-23 days
  • Originally confusion as to agents of disease
    attributions to scarlet fever, measles

80
X. Effects on SocietyThe Bubonic
PlagueandRubella
81
Effects on SocietyBubonic Plague - 1
  • Bubonic plague has been said to have changed the
    course of history.
  • Wars won and lost.
  • Influenced power of Church
  • Resulted in great persecution of people
  • Mass death and destruction
  • Mass fear, panic. Pandemic.
  • Attribution to other forces, other diseases
  • Terrorism. Special threat from pneumonic plague

82
Effects on SocietyBubonic Plague - 2
  • Plague is an infectious disease of humans and
    animals caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis.
    During the Middle Ages millions of people in
    Europe died from plague, whose current
    mortality-if untreated-ranges from 50 to 90.The
    plague has been a great protagonist in history
    because it has often been grimly present in the
    collective events of humans. Its plurisecular
    history, tied to the whole chain of ecological
    balance, has had a strong influence on the
    collective imagination on account of its sudden
    occurrence and unavoidable mortality. In the
    past, the passage from contagion to illness ended
    in death, as human remedies had no effect. The
    only way to conquer it was invoke the
    incorruptible spirit of a saint. Therefore, in
    the past, the major plague icons were saints to
    whom ordinary people attributed a fame for
    healing. More recently, many epidemic diseases
    have ceded place to biological weapons, and
    terrorists have become the modern icons of such a
    threatening reality. As a matter of fact,
    bioterrorism has become a great public health and
    infection control threat, and, among the number
    of potential biological agents, plague has
    assumed a key role.(Lippi, D. Conti, A.A.
    (2002, May). Plague, policy, saints and
    terrorists a historical survey. Journal of
    infection, 44(4) 226-228. Retrieved October 22,
    2002, from FirstSearch WilsonSelect Plus Fulltext
    database.)

83
Effects on SocietyBubonic Plague - 3
  • Plague as a Biological Weapon
  • From Working Group on Civilian Biodefense.
    (2000). Consensus statement plague as a
    biological weapon medical and public health
    management. JAMA, Journal of the American
    Medical Association, 283(17), 2281-2290.
    Retrieved October 29, 2002, from Academic Search
    Premier/Ebscohost database.
  • Group Objective come to consensus as to measures
    to be taken by medical and public health
    professionals if plague used as a biological
    weapon against civilians.
  • Evidence MEDLINE searches 1/1966-1/2000 for
    MESH subject headings Yersinia pestis,
    biological weapon, biological terrorism.
    Biological warfare, biowarfare

84
Effects on SocietyBubonic Plague - 4
  • Plague as a Biological Weapon
  • From Working Group on Civilian Biodefense.
    (2000). Consensus statement plague as a
    biological weapon medical and public health
    management. JAMA, Journal of the American
    Medical Association, 283(17), 2281-2290.
    Retrieved October 29, 2002, from Academic Search
    Premier/Ebscohost database.
  • Conclusions An aerosolized plague weapon could
    cause fever, cough, chest pain, and hemoptysis
    with signs consistent with severe pneumonia 1 to
    6 days after exposure. Rapid evolution of disease
    would occur in the 2 to 4 days after symptom
    onset and would lead to septic shock with high
    mortality without early treatment. Early
    treatment and prophylaxis with streptomycin or
    gentamicin or the tetracyclin or fluoroquinolone
    classes of antimicrobials would be advised.
  • Peace.

85
Effects on Society Rubella
  • First identified teratogen
  • Focused world on intrauterine disease
    transmission from mother to fetus
  • Focused world on importance of good health for
    women, particularly women who are, intend to
    become pregnant
  • Disease with mild symptoms, can have devastating
    effects (highly contagious CRS)
  • Public awareness concerning need for
    vaccinations, national immunization programs
  • MMR vaccine controversy health scares / Internet
    age
  • Public awareness and programs, re
    differabilities, equity of a
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