The
White Plague, Tuberculosis, Man, and Society. (1952)
Part One: The Nineteenth Century.
Part Two: The Causes of Tuberculosis.
Part Three: Cure and Prevention
of TB.
Part Four: Tuberculosis and
Society.
Part
One: The Nineteenth
Century
Chapter 2: Death Warrant for Keats
Chapter 3: Flight from the North Winds
Chapter 4: Contagion and Heredity
Chapter 5: Consumption and the Romantic Age.
Part
Two: The Causes of Tuberculosis
Chapter 6: Phthisis, Consumption, Tubercles
Chapter 7: Percussion, the Unitarian Theory
Chapter 9: Infection and Disease
Part
Three: Cure and Prevention of TB
Chapter 10: Evaluating Therapeutic
Procedures
Chapter 11: Treatment and Natural Resistance
Chapter 12: Drugs, Vaccines
and Public Health
Chapter 13: Healthy Living and Sanitoria
Part
Four: TB and Society
Chapter 14: The evolution of Epidemics
Chapter 15: Industrial civilization
Forward
Combined and epidemiological/ecological approach
"tuberculosis was a widespread and deadly infectious disease. . . . the source of a staggering amount of illness and mortality and engaged some of the best minds in the medical sciences."
"Developed a respect for the mystery of this disease."
As both
1. ÒA methodological improvement in the understanding of health,Ó
2. Òthe basis of a humanistic philosophy that could help preserve the best qualities of mankind through the awareness of the complex interrelationships between populations and environments.Ó
"René Dubos was a pioneer who introduced many of us to the marvels and significance of these transactions between man [humans] and environment and the extraordinary adaptiveness of organisms to changing conditions. However, as he knew, the human capacity to reconstruct the environment symbolically and to manipulate it physically opened new but sometime threatening avenues."
David Mechanic, pp. vii-xi.
Vii
Òdisease was a prevalent and destructive experience that threatened
social order....Human history and tubercle bacillus are so enmeshed
that to follow the course of the disease over time is a prerequisite
to understanding what the whole struggle to control disease means to ourselves
and our contemporary society.Ó
Xiii
Òreflections about the medical and social conception of tuberculosis.Ó
Consumptive
personal ˆ microbe specific, disease causing agent (1882)ˆsocial hygiene/public health stages with the
introduction of first therapy and second antibiotic treatment phases.
ÒTuberculosis,
however, was already a less ominous disease for the audience that read The White Plague when it was first published
in 1952.
100,00
case per annum of which declined from 34,000 to 11,000 annually.
Jean
and RenŽ Dubos called tuberculosis Ôa social diseaseÕ in order to associate
the disease with poverty, although the term was more commonly associated with
sexually transmitted diseases.Ó
ÒEconomic
and social conditions, the Duboses stressed, were
crucial factors in its transmission.Ó
Ò. . . had profound social consequences in that it affected the Ôemotional
and intellectual climate of the societies it attackedÕ.Ó
xv
Òit is emphatically a disease of the 19th century.Ó
Industrialism and pollution
ÒAlongside
their account of the social ecology of tuberculosis, the Duboses
celebrate the history of scientific research that culminated in Robert KochÕs
discovery of the tubercle bacillus in 1882.Ó
ÒIt
was at last possible to show the common pathology of different symptoms and
the necessary bacterial origin of every tubercular infection.Ó
Ò...first examining the complex social environment that generated
the conditions of disease, and the second celebrating the growth of scientific
knowledge about the biology of tuberculosis, added an important tension to
the DubosesÕ narrative. . . .Ó
ÒResistence to infection was the best explanation for this
fall in the death rates.Ó
xvi
ÒOn
the other hand, the discovery of tubercle bacillus and the demonstration of
its necessary role in disease failed, at first, to change the minds of many
doctors and the public, who continued to blame the incidence of tuberculosis
on heredity, climate, or psychogenic causes.Ó
xvi-xvii
ÒEvidence
that pathogenic organisms, including tubercle bacillus, developed drug resistant
strains underscored the potential for medical disaster and the need for therapeutic
prudence.Ó
ÒNature reveals many roads that lead to the
direction of truth.Ó René & Jean Dubose in their own
words
Òtransform the human experience of illness.Ó
xvii
ÒThey
perceived a danger in the scientific and social logic that aimed to treat
the disease rather than to modify the underlying causes of vulnerability,
and their own moral logic served to inform their history of tuberculosis.Ó
xviii
Chapter 1:The Captain
Chapter 2: Death Warrant for Keats
Chapter 3: Flight from the North Winds
Keats
and Shelley, (Paganini, Tsarevitch Nicolas, and
famous families BronteÕs, Trolopes)
ÒThey
were part of a great pilgrimage, begun long before, leading the sick from
the Northern fog toward the Southern sun–shrine of health joy and illusion.Ó
Òthe Mediterranean coast as Ôthe last ditch of the consumptiveÕ.Ó
19
ÒBut for
most Americans, the Southern and Western states were less forbidding than
Europe. Florida and the Caribbean Islands, and later Colorado, New Mexico,
and Arizona, provided for North American consumptives the illusion of refuge
with which the Mediterranean lured their European brothers in disease.Ó
25
Cecil
Rhodes went to Natal for the cure from Oxford.
26
Cicero
– cured or health improved considerably by sea voyages
27.
Chapter 4: Contagion and
Heredity
Southern European doctors believed
in contagion –exposure
Northern European doctors believed
in heredity, a predisposition due to inheritance (families)
Chapter
5: Consumption
and the Romantic Age
Epidemics have often been more influential than
statesmen and soldiers in shaping the course of political history, and diseases
may also color the moods of civilians. Because they are part of everyday life, . . their role is rarely emphasized
by historians.Ó
ÒTuberculosis then being so prevalent,
may have contributed to the atmosphere of gloom that made possible the success
of the Ôgraveyard schoolÕ of poetry and the development of the romantic mood.Ó
p.
44.
Ò. . .became popular themes over much of Europe around 1750. . . . Ò
44-45.
Chapter
6: Phthisis, Consumption and Tubercles
In 1881 August Flint published in collaboration
with William H. Welch – The Principles and Practices of Medicine.
ÒThe authors dealt at length with the subject of tuberculosis, mentioning as its causes: hereditary disposition, unfavorable climate, sedentary indoor life, defective ventilation, deficiency of light and Ôdepressing emotionsÕ.Ó
Òcontagiousness.
. . has its advocates, but the general belief is in its non-communicability.Ó
Òbecome so soon and completely outmoded,Ó
1882 Robert KochÕs discovery of the causative agent, tubercle bacilli, established for a time the dominance of the germ theory of disease over the competing hereditary versus environmental theories and brings ecological health to the forefront of scientific thinking.
p. 69
Chapter
7: Percussion, Auscultation and the Unitarian Theory
of Phthisis
Òin 1761, a new method
for the detection of diseases of the chest. The method was based on the observation of the thorax, on being
tapped, yieldsÓ different sounds.
77
La‘nnec
in 1803 Òfound tubercles in all organs of the body, muscle and bone included.Ó
p. 83.
Òwere in reality, all
different phases in the evolution of the same pathological process.Ó
pp. 83-84.
Chapter 8:
The Germ Theory of Tuberculosis
ÒThe belief in the contagiousness
of phthisis first became firmly entrenched, . . .in Italy, Spain, and the South of France.
Benjamin Marten, in a volume printed
in London, in 1722 he presented his opinion that ÔanimalculaeÕ. . . were the immediate cause of the disease.Ó
p.
94
Chapter 9: Infection and Disease
ÒTubercle bacilli are
minute rods, so small that large numbers of them can be packed inside the
microscopic white cells of the blood and tissues.Ó Ò.
. . they are readily engulfed by these white cells, in health as well as in
disease.Ó
p.
111.
ÒThus, certain fractions of the
dead bacilli elicit the production of characteristic tubercles, whereas others
render the animals allergic to tuberculin; injection in large amounts of bacillary
material can cause the appearance of ulcers full of caseous* material, and even bring about a state
of chronic toxemia, with progressive emaciation resulting in death.Ó
p.
112.
ÒFortunately most of the bacilli
with which we come in contact are not capable of multiplying extensively in
our tissues.Ó
p. 113.
Chapter 10: The evaluation of Therapeutic Procedures
ÒLike many of his contemporaries, the famous English scientist, Thomas Young, had
suffered from consumption during his early adulthood. . . he had made a full recovery.Ó
Òhe recommended
early diagnosisÓ and intervention –advocated spirometry
ÒHe discussed the occurrence of
consumption in different parts of the world and in different populations and
presented some evidence suggesting it infectious nature.Ó
p.
131.
Chapter 11: Treatment and Natural Resistance
ÒAs long as tuberculosis was diagnosed only in its late phase, the relief of distressing
symptoms occupied the most important place in treatment.Ó
Ò . . .they
improved the sense of well-being of the patient. To this class belongs the
inhalation of vapors from resinous, balsamic substances and emollient herbs,
the sucking of cracked ice in hemoptysis**,
the use of opiates for quieting cough and the pains of intestinal tuberculosis.Ó
Pierre Louis ÒHe thus convinced
himself that none of the drugs then known were of benefit in tuberculosis.
But of opium he said, ÔIt frequently produces so material an improvement in
chronic phthisis, that the patients fancy themselves
cured, or almost cured, after having taken a few dosesÕ.Ó
p.
139.
Cod liver oil
p. 140.
Chapter 12: Drugs, Vaccines
and Public Health Measures
ÒThe Germ Theory opened several new lines of attack against tuberculosis. It stimulated
the search for antimicrobial drugs useful in treatment, and for vaccines capable
of immunizing the well person against infection. It led to the development
of techniques for the detection of infected individuals and to sanitary measures
for preventing the spread of disease.Ó
Ò . . . unforeseen
and formidable obstacles have been encountered on the way.Ó
p. 154.
ÒThe first convincing reports of
therapeutic effect in tuberculosis of the guinea pig were published in the
1930s–first with sulfanimide and then
with diamino-diphenyl-sulfone. Although these two
drugs proved useless in the treatment of human tuberculosis, the demonstration
of their effectiveness in animals acted as a great stimulus for further research
and soon led to the discovery of several substances, which can be used in
man. Of these, streptomycin and para-amino-salicylic
acid (PAS) appear, to date, the most useful; they exhibit an immense activity
against tubercle bacilli.Ó
p. 154-55.
Òpatients suffering from miliary and
meningeal tuberculosisÓ
... Òalmost
invariably fatal before the use of the drug (streptomycin).Ó
155
Chapter 13: Healthy Living and Sanitoria
ÒThe
knowledge and traditions concerning the management of the tuberculous patient are now codified in the formula of sanatorium life.Ó
173
Ò. . .but these are all hospitals and not places devoted primarily
to a healthy way of life.Ó
1791,
by Lettsom, a fashionable Quaker physician in London
173
ÒAnd
for a few decades longer the medical profession continued to regard abundant
food and fresh air as poisons for the tuberculous patient.Ó
Òthe sanitary revolutionÓ
ÒIn 1853, for example, the Government
of Lucca in Italy began sending scrofulous children to the sea baths at Viareggio.Ó
ÒThe
work of the German Hermann Brehner marked the turning
point in the treatment of tuberculosis throughout the
world.Ó
Born in Silesia in 1826, 1853
Òdoctoral
dissertation to the theme that
pulmonary tuberculosis is curable.Ó
Òhis belief
at in the beneficial effects of life at high altitudes . . . Alexander von
Humboldt who had assured him that the disease did not exist in mountainous
areas.Ó
175
1650 and 1850 the high mortality periods
for TB in Britain & Europe.
400 in 1835
for Boston, New York, and Philadelphia
26
in 1950
morbidity
rates deaths per one hundred thousand
185
ÒThat tuberculosis began to decrease long before
any special measures had been instituted against the disease–indeed,
before there was any scientific basis on which to formulate anti-tuberculosis
campaigns.Ó
long before the microbiological
discovery of TB bacteria, the rate of morbidity & mortality was falling,
even before the antitubercular campaign.
185-8
Òthe treatment and segregation
of patients in sanatoria did not gain momentum until 1900; vaccination is
only now (1950s) coming into use and is not practiced at all in some of the
places where mortality has reached its lowest level, as to therapeutic measures–like
lung collapse, thoracic surgery, and the use of streptomycin and PAS–they
are of too recent date to have played a part in the phenomenon.Ó
ÒBut even at this lower level (200/100,000) tuberculosis
remained the greatest killer of the human race, and it is not surprising,
therefore, that many physicians and public health officers remained for a
time unaware of the downward trend that had begun spontaneously.Ó
186
ÒTB
is not the only infectious disease that exhibits an apparently spontaneous
ebb and flow. Most epidemics first appear in the form of a few sporadic cases;
this is the early phase followed by one of great prevalence and severity;
then new cases become progressively fewer and fewer, the disease often taking
a benign character before disappearing almost completely for a time.Ó
Òthere are on record, for example, many outbreaks of epidemic
influenza recurring at intervals of apparently twenty years: but it is probable
that the profound changes in the distribution of populations and in medical
practices during the past few decades will blur considerably, or even eliminate
completely, the regularity of this epidemic cycle.Ó
187
ÒTests
in experimental animals have so far failed to give any indication that the
virulence of tuberculosis has significantly
decreased during historical times, or at least since the bacteriological era.Ó
187-88.
ÒHowever,
it is much more difficult to demonstrate the role of inherited susceptibility
and resistance in the general population, partly because genetic traits are
distributed in such a complex manner that they fail to appear as a clear pattern,
partly because the influence of environmental factors on the course of tuberculosis
is so great as to mask the manifestations of hereditary characteristics.Ó
Ò...most of the susceptible die young without leaving any progeny.Ó
{ evolution unaffected
[hence chances of inherited
disease proclivity is decreased]
ÒSelective
elimination of the most susceptibleÓ
Òthere is evidence that repeated exposure to infection confers on survivors an acquired immunity
which supplements their innate endowmentsÓ
189
Òthey become allergic to tuberculin without ever showing any evidence of clinical disease.Ó
ÒExposure
in childhood, over time Òmay
have led progressively to the development in urbanized areas of a partially
immune population.Ó
Òtuberculosis usually
exhibits a very acute course
in populations newly exposed to it.Ó
190
9000 / 100,000
Indians in western Canada
were infected with TB once they abandoned their hunting way of life and settled
down into sedentary villages.
40% of the
deaths in Hawaii and New Caledonia, after contact, were attributed to TB.
191
ÒEuropean people of Celtic origin appear to
be particularly susceptible to TB.Ó
192
ÒThe
history of TB in different human populations makes it plain that racial (ethnic)
susceptibility or resistance is to a very large extent a consequence of social
history.Ó
¥
Rural nomadic people become susceptible to virulent
TB
¥
Urban exposed populations become resistant to TB
ÒÉit is also true that living conditions are (diet?) of paramount
importance in determining the severity of this response.Ó
From
83 / 100,000 [Manhattan] to 52/100,000 [Bronx]
among densely settled and less
densely settle Jewish communities in NYC .
193
Òwretched economic statusÓ can mask the otherwise decline in
cases among less dense populations.
TB
in Paris shot up during the siege of the Franco-Prussian War, 1871
194
ÒThus
the course of TB during and after the war illustrates in a striking manner the powers at
the disposal of the human body to
master the disease when living conditions are favorable.Ó
195
ÒIt
seems that the severity of TB immediately reflect the complex of disturbances
brought about in the community as a whole by most forms of social upheavals,
be they abrupt changes in ancestral habits, rapid industrialization, or wars.Ó
195-96
ÒObviously
the equilibrium between man and the tubercle bacillus is very precarious.Ó
196
Chapter 15: Industrial civilization
Each and every vice, large or small–in fact almost any form of unconventional behavior–was
regarded as a cause of consumption during the nineteenth century. According
to their personal prejudices, reformers and physicians traced the disease
to immoderate love of food, spirits, or social life; to newfangled fashions,
venery, or lack of exercise, to excessive use of tobacco or a passion for
dancing.Ó
Òimpure
air, drunkenness, and want among
the poor, and by dissipation and enervating luxuries among the rich.Ó
p. 197.
Chapter 16: Social Technology
The sufferings and loss of human values caused by the industrial revolution were unnoticed
at first by most of those who enjoyed the fruits of the new prosperity. But soon, the horrors of the manufacturing
cities began to prey on the social conscience, and protests arose in every
land.Ó
208.
ÒRobert Owen proved by organizing
model factories that humane standards of work in industry were not incompatible
with financial success.Ó
208
1837 Chadwick – Sanitary Commission
published in 1842 in UK Ófought for fair labor laws.Ó
Òsweated
labor of tuberculous
tailorsÓ
208
ÒBy 1850 reformers had come into
action everywhere, attacking the social problems by political action, or devoting
their efforts to improving the physical environment in which men had to live
and function.Ó
pp. 208-209.