Showing posts with label epidemic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label epidemic. Show all posts

September 8 - Doctor Uses NUMB3RS to Stop an Epidemic!

 Posted on September 8, 2021


This is an update of my post published on September 8, 2010:



There once was a television show called NUMB3RS about a mathematician who used his math to help the FBI solve cases. To me, the history of the 1854 cholera epidemic in London reads a bit like a NUMB3RS episode!

Most people back in the mid-1800s thought that illness was caused by breathing “bad air” or miasma—breathing poisonous vapors of some sort. 

We know - especially now, living through the COVID-19 pandemic - that some illnesses are in fact connected to the air we breathe. But we now know that it is airborne germs (viruses, bacteria, fungi, etc.) - not "poisonous vapors" - that cause those diseases. In the mid-1800s, the germ theory wasn't yet established.


Also, some illnesses aren't transmitted through air.

When there was a deadly outbreak of cholera in London, Dr. John Snow talked to residents and created a map showing the location of the cases. With the map, he realized that the miasma theory of the cause of the disease didn't match the evidence. Using the interviews and the map, Dr. Snow was able to trace the outbreak to the public water pump on Broad Street in Soho.




Snow was most convinced that the pump was to blame when he discovered that people who lived nearby who did NOT use water from that pump also did not come down with cholera.

Snow examined a sample of the water through a microscope, and ran some chemical tests as well, and he was not able to conclusively prove its danger. However, he still used statistics and his map to convince the local council to disable the water pump by removing its handle on this date in 1854.



And the outbreak stopped.

Later, it was discovered that this public well had been dug only three feet from an old cesspit, and it was being polluted by sewage.

There is still a replica of the Broad Street 

 
Dr. Snow went on to use statistics to show that a waterworks company was using water from sewage-polluted portions of the Thames River for use in homes—and those homes suffered from more cases of cholera than other homes. Because of Dr. Snow's work, our understanding of disease prevention and public health took a giant leap.

Hooray for numbers!

Learn more...

  • Here is a virtual tour of a modern water treatment plant. And here is a longer (and I believe better) video tour.


  • Part of numbers and statistics is probability. Try using this dice-roll simulation. Roll the dice 5 time, then 50, 500, and 5000. How does the number of rolls affect the results?

Also on this date:








































February 2 – Serum Run, AKA the Great Race of Mercy

Posted on February 2, 2018


"The last great race!"

This popular yearly race from to Settler's Bay to Nome, Alaska, honors the history of dog "mushing."

You probably know that "dog mushing" is a sport or a means of transportation that is powered by dogs. In this case, sleds pulled by dogs.



But did you know that this popular sport actually began with a serious event?

The year was 1924, and the small town of Nome, Alaska, was pretty far from Alaska's major cities and ports. 

Nome had a doctor, someone who was smart and careful enough to notice in the fall of that year that the entire batch of diphtheria antitoxin in the town's small hospital had expired. He placed an order for more.

But back then things took longer to move, and the shipment did not arrive before Nome's port closed for the winter.

And that winter (now the year 1925), diphtheria struck the town. Several people died, and the doctor was sure that an epidemic was likely. He telegrammed for help.

Blizzard conditions meant that an airplane from Anchorage couldn't deliver the life-saving serum. No ship could reach them. What was left?

A relay of dog sled teams was organized to deliver the serum. Twenty mushers and about 150 sled dogs crossed Alaska from Nenana to Nome - 674 miles (1,085 km) - in five and a half days.


The antitoxin arrived on February 2 at 5:30 a.m.


This dog sled relay saved Nome and surrounding communities from the epidemic - and the dogs and the mushers became heroes. Headlines about the dog sled delivery hit newspapers across the country. Newscasters on the radio talked all about it. Balto, who was the lead sled dog on the final leg to Nome, became famous - and his statue was erected in New York City's Central Park!


One result of the publicity was that many more people in the U.S. got vaccines against diphtheria. Because of that, the dreaded disease took a big dip in numbers of victims. Excellent!