4. Germs, parasites and humans Flashcards
Give a brief history of germ theory. 7
- 1830s - scientists found evidence that yeast consisted of small spherules, which had the property of multiplying and were therefore living organisms
- new microscopes, labs and experiments revealed new world of life
- at this time, there was a general view that certain organisms caused putrefaction
- 1850s - Louis Pasteur - fermentation depended on living forms/bacteria and proposed partial sterilization destroyed most bacteria, most enzymes and made milk, wine and food safe
- Pasteur suggested that bacteria also caused human and animal disease
- Called germ theory - developed in germany and france in 1880s
- Koch applied germ theory to disease and his postulates are still used today to identify a disease causing microorganism
What is germ theory? 4
- The theory that disease was caused by microorganisms/germs, not climate, miasma or environment
- robert koch was the first to devise the proofs to verify theory
- Postulates first used in 1875 to prove anthrax (cattle disease affecting farming and leather industry) was caused by Bacillus anthracis
- Discovered cholera vibrio in 1883
Describe the impact of germs and vaccines. 7
- Pasteur combined work of partial sterilisation and identification to develop vaccines
- 1870s - applied immunisation method to anthrax
- 1885 - rabies vaccine - a dreaded disease passed from animals to humans
- vaccines and pasteruisation became keys of pasteurian science in 1880s
- His science influences French public health, veterinary medicine, agriculture and the food industry
- In europe, Pasteur Institutes did anthrax, rabies, TB and plague vaccinations, food preservation, agricultural, dairy and meat production and determined diet and nutrition
- Britain had no Pasteur Institute, suspicious that vaccine and animal experiences could cause rabies
How was the rabies vaccine invented? 7
- Louis Pasteur in 1885
- Disease affects nervous system
- Took dead rabid dog and infected rabbit with spinal cord
- Rabbit died
- Took spinal cord of rabbit and infected another
- Repeated until disease attenuated enough for vaccine
- first vaccine acted as dried spinal cord in mixture
Describe the new power that scientists gained with the acceptance of the germ theory. 5
- Some, incl Pasteur, believed the victory of vaccines lay in the power of scientists over life
- French power had been declining since 1815, but establishment of third republic in 1870 increased power and came with colonialism in Africa and Asia
- This coincided with Pasteur’s achievements
- Pasteurian science became dominant global paradigm
- institutional and imperial expansion of germ theory and vaccination
How did Pasteurian science relate to politics? 4
- People came from around the world for Pasteur’s rabies vaccine
- The pasteur insti in paris and others in franch demanded vaccination and pasteurisation of all farms to politicians
- claimed for the country’s health
- gaining political, not just scientific, power
Pasteur institutes in the French empire. 5
- Indo-china
- North Africa
- Sub-saharan africa
- Shows expansion of imperial power
- Pasteurisation of france and the world had huge economic implications
What was the role of colonial Pasteur institutes? 4
- Tunis and Morocco influenced mediterranean economy by promoting vaccination and pasteurisation in farming
- trade couldn’t pass through without certificate of pasteurisation from Pasteur institute
- french followers wanted a coalition of pasteur instis around med. for more coordinated and cooperative research, by developing business alliances across region
- Charles Nicolle ran operation from Tunis and was called the emperor of the med. sea
How did France use germ theory to try to change views of their colonialism? 3
- France claimed their method of colonial civilization were based on science and modernity rather than missionary style
- Pasteur instis built in colonies and transformation of them
- W. Haffkine took the cholera vaccine to slums of Calcutta to help
What was the importance of microbe hunters in the years following germ theory? 6
- 1870s-80s were years of the microbe hunters
- gave new scientists credibility and fame if they found a microbe
- many travelled the world to find microbes
- in a shot period, bacteriologists isolated and cultivated many pathogenic bacteria and viruses (1870s-1880s)
- Some, incl. Koch, physically hunted animals to find microbes eg. Trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness)
- Scientific missions mixed with imperial culture of hunting - power of lab corresponded to imperial power
Describe the development of the healthy carrier theory. 7
- During typhoid research, Koch proposed that there was a ‘carrier state’
- Suggested healthy people could carry the diseases in gallbladder/intestines and infect others
- Used this to explain endemic nature of disease among populations, who could also infect others
- eg. all people of Bengal carry cholera - dangerous idea as it turns all people from one place into a threat
- the human body became the focus of research as the site of germs - morbid anatomy studies
- important implications for the 20thc racial pathology, public health and immigration policies
- severe quarantines imposed
Describe the french ‘mission’. 5
- End 19thC, french officials, scientists and imperial governors descended on the colonies to civilise them and spread the messages and gifts of france
- Became a movement to introduce french modernity to the colonies
- french pasteur instis used the word mission as it implied humanitarian activities
- this was continuous with earlier 1840s missionary efforts - similar tactics were used eg. spreading the word of god/pasteur, but now secular
- scientists were the new missionaries, wearing white robes eg. charles nicolle in north africa
How did pasteurian science impact Algeria? 7
- Brothers edmond and etienne sergent were trained in french microbiology and joined pasteur insti in algeria in 1912
- 1927- french colonial authority granted sergent brothers a 360 acre malarial marshland along railway line to do fieldwork
- sergents researched how pasteurian anti-malaria work could transform algerian landscape and culture
- dug drainage canals (local labour) planted trees and introduced predatory fish
- marshes replaced with livestock and cereal crops and algerian farmers persuaded to settle
- farmers taught modern farming methods and vineyards planted- good economically for french government
- sergent brothers believed they humanised the once savage marshland
How did germ theory impact civilisation? 7
- Human carrier theory reinforced medical segregation based on race and class
- removal of germs of disease by pasteurian missionaries became social and cultural reform, as they were removing filth, unclean habits and segregating races and groups
- french bacteriologists determined to remove tropical disease and realities
- late 19thC rio de janeiro - city elites used civilisation and germs to justify protecting own interests and isolating poor
- poor identified as disease/dirt carriers and removed to outskirts, habits changed and mass vaccination enforced
- australia - gvnmt wanted a white australia, and chinese immigrants seen as unclean and reservoirs of disease
- quarantine procedures became strict to prevent entrance of foreign (chinese) germs)
How did bacteriology make medicine scientific? 3
- Breaks from traditional notions of humourology and climate
- use of lab
- universal and global medicine