3. Quarantine and the International Sanitary Conferences Flashcards
What is the historical significance of quarantine? 6
- medical screening - greater role of medicine and drs in international policies and boundaries
- international diplomacy - needs understanding among nations about the factors that lead to epidemics
- reflected economic, social and cultural factors involved in infectious disease eg. by banning certain products from trade
- important role in regulations that govern movement of foreign people and goods across borders, therefore represents level of state intervention over citizens and outsiders
- connected with development of restrictive immigration polices and protection/control of trade
- used effectively in international relations and a way of protecting sovereignty of the state, both in and out of political boundaries
How/when did quarantine become important?3
- mid 19thC, global migration begins
- quarantine becomes very important
- quarantine is a reflection of migration and disease
give the early history of quarantine and trade routes. 7
- earliest by italian merhcants in mediterranean during the black death
- intended to stop plague spreading to western europe by land and sea routes
- in medieval era, mediterranean was centre of world, where east and west trade met
- very rich port cities, received most of profit for asian goods
- spanish trade opens to atlantic trade
- in 1498, mediterranean trade declines as cargo taken directly to india via boat around cape of africa
- affects italian and arab trade
Describe the global spread of cholera. 4
- 1816-1823 - east asia and india affected
- 1826-37 - europe, uk, north and east africa
- 1842-1862 - becomes global. more of africa and much of north, some of south africa
- 1865-1975 - declines in americas, africa and europe but still global
give the history of modern quarantine. 5
- by mid-19thc, repeated european cholera pandemics highlighted need for quarantine in europe
- france proposed an 1834 meeting to discuss international standardisation of quarantine
- france held the contagiontist position - britain didn’t participate
- 1851 - first international sanitary conference in paris
- 10 conferences 1851-1900, compromise reached in 1893 over min and max holding times
Why was it difficult to reach a quarantine agreement? 6
- contagion vs anticontagionism divided opinion on importance of quarantine vs local conditions
- there was international disagreement
- quarantine had different political/economic factors to consider in each state
- quarantine causes goods to perish and reduces prices
- cholera was coming from Bengal, a british colony, so could damage british trade - good for france
- the debate became critical at the 1885 rome conference
Explain the importance of the suez canal and the events of 1885. 9
- Suez canal dug by french in 1869
- allowed ships to reach asia without travelling around cape, could go through egypt
- the british opposed - wanted a railway line
- there were a lot of french in egypt by 1882, but british found success there and took over, incl. control of canal
- by 1880s, 80% suez canal ships british
- mediterranean becomes important again and europe arab relations very important
- discovery of cholera vibrio by robert koch in 1883 in egypt
- 1883 cholera outbreak at suez canal - british blamed for bringing it from asia
- quarantine enforced here
Who was willian hunter? 4
- british surgeon-general
- gives to egypt and publishes cholera report in 1883
- said cholera due to bad summer of miasma
- claimed not connected to bengal cholera
What work did robert koch do on cholera? 3
- in 1883, identifies cholera pathogen in dead
- leaves to find patients in calcutta, india
- dooes not find patients but finds vibrio in water tank and concludes bacilli travelled
What was the argument surrounding germ theory, contagionism and anticontagionism, and quarantine? 5
- In 1884, koch gave a lecture to the German Imperial Board of Health and said cholera traveled from Indian ports eg, calcutta and bombay, to the red sea, through the suez and to europe
- suggested cholera could reach egypt in 11 days, italy in 16 days and sough of france in 18 days
- he argued that main carriers were crowded british coolie ships carrying indian labourers to work in west indies via suez canal
- some believed cholera bacilli/germ theory an attempt to stop suez trade
- contagion vs non-contagion became a qustion of health vs trade
what happened at the international sanitary conference of venice in 1892? 7
- some agreements reached
- all ships passing through suez classified as to whether there was a cholera case on board
- debate on how long quarantine should be
- all hajj pilgrim ships to mecca from india were quarantined at al tur for several days - conditions were very bad
- separate strain of cholera developed in al tur quarantine station
- those traders etc. with no cholera could pass through
- those with suspected cholera were inspected by dr and a disinfecting machine brought on board
what happened at the 1903 international sanitary conference? 5
- 11th international sanitary conference, initiated by italians, held in paris
- unified earlier conferences in light of scientific knowledge (1892, 94, 97)
- resulted in international sanitary convention of 1903, which was ratified by most participating states in 1907
- first convention to introduce international conformity against cholera and plague
- superseded by conventions of maritime traffic of 1912 and 1926, 1926 modified in 1938, 44.
How did quarantine pander to and reinforce the fear of the other? 6
- quarantine received a lot of popular support in europe as it kept ‘the others’ away, yet mostly directed against ordinary people
- european sanitary commissions saw islam as the obstacle against the european sanitary movement - assumed cholera arrived with hajj pilgrims
- brutal detentions, obstacles etc. were placed in pilgrim’s way - most important was lazaret at al tur in sinai peninsula
- kept there for 15-20 days with limited water supply
- anyone suspected of cholera was kept for 3-4 months in extreme heat and cold
- continued into 20thc - in 1933, became more lenient and pilgrims vaccinated
What was the significance of the international sanitary conferences? 7
- highlighted how issues of infections and diseases were related to imperial economy, diplomacy and politics
- highlighted cultural and political differences within europe and between europe and asia
- realisation that spread of disease can’t be halted without international cooperation
- differences in ideas about contagion and quarantine
- some thought quarantine progressive and the only way to stop spread of disease based on science
- supporters of free trade movement and free movement of goods and people found it to be regressive
- international sanitary conferences led to international health organisations
How did the international sanitary conferences approach asia? 5
- conferences eurocentric in nature and constitution, which viewed asia or the orient as backward, filthy and disease ridden
- fear of asia/east as new routes and communication brought it closer
- start of european dominance in international health, and view that asian systems should be replaced with european medical care
- europe and usa portrayed as healthy and progressive, invaded by asian disease
- particularly visible in australia where quarantine became very important to protect from asian people and disease