THE GEOGRAPHY OF DISEASE, AND THE FACTORS WHICH DETERMINE IT
Resumo
The study which forms the subject of this volume differs in many
respects from a study of the geographical distribution of more concrete
objects, such as certain groups of animals, plants, or minerals. Though
constantly spoken of as if it were a material, tangible entity, disease
is, in fact, no such thing. It is only a morbid phenomenon, or rather a
group of morbid processes, in the tissues of a particular animal
organism. In the language of logic, it is not even a phenomenon, but an
epiphenomenon. It is only in that class of diseases known or believed to
be of Parasitic origin that there exists, in addition to the group of
intangible signs and symptoms which in ordinary language constitute the
disease, a tangible, palpable something, the distribution of which over
the earth's surface may be justly compared with the distribution of
mammals or insects, herbs or trees. But, on the one hand, it has not yet
been shown that all, or nearly all, diseases are of this character;
and, on the other hand, even where the parasitic origin of a human
disease has been proved, it is well to bear in mind that the parasite
and the disease are not one and the same thing, nor is their
geographical distribution always or of necessity identical. There is
good reason to believe, for example, that the parasites which are the
known or suspected causes of such diseases as cholera, blackwater fever,
malaria, guinea-worm disease, hydatids, and perhaps enteric and other
fevers, may and do exist for long periods together outside the human
body, and that there are uninhabited or sparsely inhabited tracts of the
earth's surface where these parasites remain in the soil, or in water,
or in the bodies of the lower animals, and where the human disease
associated with them is only set up when man visits those tracts. In
other words, the area of distribution of some disease parasites may be
wider than the area of distribution of the human disease caused by them.
In these instances the disease has a wider distribution potentially
than actually. In others the reverse may be the case, and the area of
distribution of the disease may at any given moment be actually wider
than that of the parasite which gave rise to it. This, however, is
exceptional, and can only occur in the case of certain affections of
long duration, such, for example, as elephantiasis arabum, where the
symptoms of the disease remain long after the filaria or other parasite
which first caused them has disappeared from the tissues.
Palavras-chave
Medical Geography; Geography of disease, Epidemic diseases
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Este periódico está classificado como B1 para Geografia.