The diseases that changed humanity forever - Dan Kwartler

480,140 views ・ 2023-11-28

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Since humanity's earliest days,
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we’ve been plagued by countless disease-causing pathogens.
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Invisible and persistent,
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these microorganisms and the illnesses they incur
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have killed more humans than anything else in history.
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But which disease is deadliest varies across time and place.
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Because while the march of progress has made us safer
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from some infectious threats,
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human innovation often exposes us to surprising new maladies.
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Our tour of history’s deadliest diseases begins
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when humans lived in small hunter-gatherer communities.
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The illnesses these pre-agricultural nomads encountered
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most likely came from the various animals they ate,
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and the soil and water they interacted with.
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There are no written records to help us identify these diseases,
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however, some illnesses leave distinct growths or lesions on the skeleton,
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allowing bioarchaeologists to diagnose ancient remains.
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And researchers have found that bones from this era
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suggest the presence of tuberculosis and treponemal infections.
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While these conditions are life-threatening,
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the deadliest diseases are invariably part of widespread epidemics,
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and there’s no evidence of any large-scale outbreaks
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in this lengthy pre-agricultural period.
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However, when humans started developing agriculture around 12,000 years ago,
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it brought a whole new crop of diseases.
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Early farmers knew little about waste and water management,
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setting the stage for diarrheal diseases like dysentery.
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Much worse, the proliferation of open fields and irrigation
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created standing pools of water which brought mosquitoes and in turn malaria—
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one of history’s oldest and deadliest diseases.
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We don’t know exactly how many early farmers malaria killed,
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or how many it left vulnerable to other lethal infections.
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But we do know this mosquito-borne illness continued to spread
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through humanity’s next major development: urbanization.
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In small communities,
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infectious diseases like measles and smallpox can only circulate so long
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before running out of hosts.
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But in densely populated regions with high birth rates,
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fast-evolving viruses like the flu can continually infect new individuals
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and morph into various strains.
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When large settlements became common,
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medical science hadn't advanced enough to effectively treat
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or even distinguish these variants.
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Nor was it prepared to deal with one of the deadliest pandemics of all time:
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the Black Death.
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From the 1330s to the 1350s,
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the bubonic plague swept Asia, Africa and Europe,
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reducing the global population from 475 million to roughly 350 million.
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Like most Afro-Eurasian diseases,
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the plague didn’t cross the Atlantic until Europeans did in the late 1400s.
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But at the height of the plague in Europe, Asia, and North Africa,
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infection was almost guaranteed,
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and the plague’s fatality rate ranged from 30 to 75%.
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However, the illness wasn't equally distributed among the population.
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Many wealthy lords and landowners were able to stay safe
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by hiding away in their spacious homes.
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As medical knowledge became more robust,
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this kind of class disparity began reflecting who had access to medical care.
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And that divide became particularly apparent during the reign
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of our next deadly disease.
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By the beginning of the 19th century,
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tuberculosis was already one of the most common causes of death
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in Europe and the Americas.
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But the Industrial Revolution led to working and living conditions
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that were overcrowded and poorly ventilated,
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turning TB into an epidemic that killed a quarter of Europe’s adult population.
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The unhealthiest environments were largely populated by impoverished individuals
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who often went untreated,
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while doctors provided wealthier victims with the era’s most cutting-edge care.
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Throughout the 20th century, vaccines became common in many countries,
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even eradicating the centuries-old viral threat of smallpox.
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The advent of vaccination,
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alongside improvements in nutrition and hygiene,
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have helped people live longer lives on average.
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And today, medical advances in rapid testing and mRNA vaccines
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can help us tackle new outbreaks in record time.
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However, countless regions around the world
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remain unable to access vaccines,
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leaving them vulnerable to older threats.
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Malaria still takes the lives of over 600,000 people every year,
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with 96% of deaths occurring in communities across Africa.
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Tuberculosis continues to infect millions,
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almost half of whom live in Southeast Asia.
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Addressing these ailments and those yet to emerge
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will require scientists to develop new and more effective medicines.
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But something governments and health care systems can do today
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is working to make the treatments we have already accessible to all.
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