Author Topic: Typhoid Mary's tragic tale exposed the health impacts of 'super-spreaders'  (Read 859 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline corbe

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 38,267
Typhoid Mary's tragic tale exposed the health impacts of 'super-spreaders'

Nina Strochlic 15 hrs ago


© Chronicle, Alamy

An Irish cook named Mary Mallon was the first person identified as being the carrier in a typhoid outbreak. The media dubbed her Typhoid Mary, and her trial and forced quarantine captured public attention. In this illustration, published around 1909, she is depicted breaking skulls into a skillet.

George Soper was not your typical detective. He was a civil engineer by training, but had become something of an expert in sanitation. So when, in 1906, a landlord in Long Island was struggling to trace the source of a typhoid outbreak, Soper was called in. The landlord had rented his Long Island house to a banker’s family and servants that summer. By late August, six of the house’s 11 inhabitants had fallen ill with typhoid fever.

Soper had been previously hired by New York state to investigate disease outbreaks—“I was called an epidemic fighter,” he later wrote—and believed that typhoid could be spread by one person serving as a carrier. In Long Island, he focused his attention on the cook, Mary Mallon, who had arrived three weeks before the first person became ill.

<..snip..>

https://www.msn.com/en-ie/news/world/typhoid-marys-tragic-tale-exposed-the-health-impacts-of-super-spreaders/ar-BB11mXEZ?li=BBr5KbJ
No government in the 12,000 years of modern mankind history has led its people into anything but the history books with a simple lesson, don't let this happen to you.