The Cholera Pandemics (1800s): Disease That Swept Nations
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The Cholera Pandemics (1800s): The Disease That Swept Nations By Anthony QuinnBefore modern medicine, before germ theory transformed science, a deadly force crossed oceans, cities, and empires changing history forever.The Cholera Pandemics (1800s): The Disease That Swept Nations takes readers into one of history's most devastating public health crises. From the crowded streets of London and Calcutta to ports, trade routes, military campaigns, and colonial territories, this book follows the rise and spread of cholera as it evolved from a regional disease into a global catastrophe.Explore: - The origins of cholera and its environmental roots - The first pandemic and the waves that followed - How trade routes, migration, and industrial growth accelerated transmission - The struggle between miasma theory and emerging scientific evidence - The work of pioneers such as John Snow, Filippo Pacini, and Robert Koch - Political failures, colonial policies, and public-health controversies - The birth of modern sanitation systems and epidemiology - Social inequality, fear, misinformation, and cultural responses - Lessons from the 19th century that still matter todayMore than a story about disease, this is a story about cities, governments, science, and human decisions. The book argues that epidemics are not only biological events they expose the strengths and weaknesses of societies themselves, a theme emphasized throughout the manuscript.For readers interested in history, medicine, public health, epidemiology, and global affairs, The Cholera Pandemics (1800s) offers a deeply researched journey through a century that reshaped the world.
The Cholera Pandemics (1800s): The Disease That Swept Nations By Anthony QuinnBefore modern medicine, before germ theory transformed science, a deadly force crossed oceans, cities, and empires changing history forever.The Cholera Pandemics (1800s): The Disease That Swept Nations takes readers into one of history's most devastating public health crises. From the crowded streets of London and Calcutta to ports, trade routes, military campaigns, and colonial territories, this book follows the rise and spread of cholera as it evolved from a regional disease into a global catastrophe.Explore: - The origins of cholera and its environmental roots - The first pandemic and the waves that followed - How trade routes, migration, and industrial growth accelerated transmission - The struggle between miasma theory and emerging scientific evidence - The work of pioneers such as John Snow, Filippo Pacini, and Robert Koch - Political failures, colonial policies, and public-health controversies - The birth of modern sanitation systems and epidemiology - Social inequality, fear, misinformation, and cultural responses - Lessons from the 19th century that still matter todayMore than a story about disease, this is a story about cities, governments, science, and human decisions. The book argues that epidemics are not only biological events they expose the strengths and weaknesses of societies themselves, a theme emphasized throughout the manuscript.For readers interested in history, medicine, public health, epidemiology, and global affairs, The Cholera Pandemics (1800s) offers a deeply researched journey through a century that reshaped the world.
AmazonPagina's: 211, Paperback, Independently published
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