The yellow fever epidemic of 1878, in Memphis, Tenn. : Embracing a complete list of the dead, the names of the doctors and nurses employed, names of all who contributed money or means, and the names and history of the Howards, together with other data, and lists of the dead elsewhere / By J.M. Keating.
- Keating, John McLeod, 1830-1906
- Date:
- 1879
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The yellow fever epidemic of 1878, in Memphis, Tenn. : Embracing a complete list of the dead, the names of the doctors and nurses employed, names of all who contributed money or means, and the names and history of the Howards, together with other data, and lists of the dead elsewhere / By J.M. Keating. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Library & Archives Service. The original may be consulted at London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Library & Archives Service.
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![I. The Yellov/ Fever, or, as Dowell prefers to term it, /e6ris typhus iderodes, or febris mm nigro vomito, tlie ficvre jaime of the Frencli, and negro vomito of the Spanish, was known to the Caribs, according to Breton, who wrote in 1655, by the French equivalent of coup de barre, expressive of the muscular pains of the fever, as if produced by blows from a stick. Like Asiatic chol- era and the small-pox, it is assigned to that class of diseases known as xpnatie (from x'jma, the Greek word for yeast). These diseases are produced by in- visible germs floating in tiie atmosphere, which, taken into the blood tlirough the lungs, are afterward propagated by the excreta and invisible emanations of the patients. The yellow fever is claimed by some to have originated and to have prevailed epidemically* in Africa, though Cortez found it prevailing lu Mexico, to whose people it was known by the name of matzlazalumtl; and the Indians of San Domingo and other West India Islands were decimated by it before and soon after the discovery of America. It is unknown in Asia, Australia, or the islands of the Pacific ; and it was unknown to Europe until after the discovery of America by Columbus. Dowell says that it was un- doubtedly introduced from Africa to America [he does not say when, nor does he tell us why, if it is an African fever, the negroes in this country are so largely exempt from it] ; that it existed in Africa, eastern Asia, and southern Europe, long before the establishment of the Greek and Roman empires, is generally well established by Hertado, even running back a thou- sand years before Christ; that it has now become endemic along the coasts, of Africa—both east and west—as well as in the West Indies and northern coast of South America, no one doubts [and he ought to have added the Epidemic diseases are those wliich attiick .nt tlie same time a great number of pec-, pie, depending on some temporary accidental and generally inappreciable canse: differ- ing, in this respect, from endemic diseases, or those developed under the inflnence of some constant or periodic cause. Many diseases, ordinarily sporadic, may become epi- demic (as* yellow fever) under certain ill-understood conditions; or some new disease, introduced by contagiim or other favorable circumst^mces, may spread epidemically.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21354017_0019.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)