How pandemics spread

3,361,094 views ・ 2012-03-12

TED-Ed


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We live in an interconnected, an increasingly globalized world.
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Thanks to international jet travel,
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people and the diseases they carry
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can be in any city on the planet in a matter of hours.
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And once a virus touches down,
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sometimes all it takes is one sneeze to spread
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the infection throughout the community.
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When humans were hunter-gatherers, roaming the wild savannas,
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we were never in one place long enough,
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and settlements were not large enough
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to sustain the transmission of infectious microbes.
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But with the advent of the agricultural revolution
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10,000 years ago, and the arrival of permanent settlements
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in the Middle East, people began living side-by-side with animals,
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facilitating the spread of bacteria and viruses
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between cattle and humans.
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Epidemics and pandemics come in many shapes and forms.
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In 2010, for instance,
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a devastating earthquake struck Haiti,
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forcing thousands of people into temporary refugee camps.
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Within weeks, the camps had become breeding grounds for cholera,
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a bacteria spread by contaminated water,
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triggering a country-wide epidemic.
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But the most common cause of epidemics are viruses,
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such as measles, influenza and HIV.
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And when they go global, we call them pandemics.
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Pandemics have occurred throughout human history,
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Some have left scars on the tissue and bone of their victims,
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while evidence for others comes from preserved DNA.
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For instance, scientists have recovered DNA
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from the bacteria that transmits tuberculosis
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from the remains of ancient Egyptian mummies.
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And in 2011,
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scientists investigating a plague pit in the city of London
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were able to reconstruct the genome of Yersinia pestis,
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the bacterium responsible for the Black Death of the 14th century.
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It is thought the plague originated in China
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in around 1340,
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spreading west along the Silk Road,
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the caravan route running from Mongolia to the Crimea.
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In 1347, the plague reached the Mediterranean,
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and by 1400, it had killed in excess of
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34 million Europeans, earning it the title,
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the Great Mortality.
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It was later historians who called it the Black Death.
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However, by far the greatest pandemic killer
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is influenza.
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Flu is constantly circulating between the Southern and Northern Hemispheres.
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In North America and Europe,
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seasonal flus occur every autumn and winter.
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As the majority of children and adults will have been exposed to the virus in previous seasons,
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these illnesses are usually mild.
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However, every 20 to 40 years or so
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the virus undergoes a dramatic mutation.
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Usually this occurs when a wild flu virus
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circulating in ducks and farm poultry
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meets a pig virus, and they exchange genes.
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This process is known as antigenic shift
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and has occurred throughout human history.
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The first recorded pandemic occurred in 1580.
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The 18th and 19th centuries
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saw at least six further pandemics.
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In terms of mortality,
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none can compare with the Great Flu Pandemic of 1918.
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The first indication of the pandemic
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came in the spring, when American troops in northern France
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began complaining of chills, headaches and fever.
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Then, the following September, at a U.S. Army barracks near Boston,
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soldiers started collapsing on parade,
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prompting their removal to the camp infirmary.
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As a surgeon there recalled,
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two hours after admission, they had the mahogany spots over the cheekbones
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and a few hours later
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you can begin to see the cyanosis extending from their ears
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and spreading all over the face.
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It is only a matter of a few hours then until death comes,
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and it is simply a struggle for air until they suffocate.
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On the S.S. Leviathan,
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a huge American transport en route to Bordeaux,
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sick men hemorrhaged blood from their noses,
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turning the decks between their bunks slick with bodily fluids.
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Meanwhile, British soldiers returning from northern France on furlough
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introduced the flu to Dover and other Channel ports,
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from where the virus was carried by rail to London.
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By the time the pandemic had run its course
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in April 1919,
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an estimated 675,000 Americans
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and 230,000 Britons were dead.
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In India alone, some 10 million were killed,
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and worldwide the death toll was an astonishing 50 million.
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But that was then.
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Today, planes can transport viruses
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to any country on the globe
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in a fraction of the time it took in 1918.
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In February 2003, for instance,
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a Chinese doctor arrived at the Metropole Hotel in Hong Kong
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feeling unwell.
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Unknown to him, he was harboring a new animal-origin virus called SARS,
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short for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome.
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Within 24 hours of checking into Room 913,
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sixteen other guests had been infected,
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and over the following days five boarded planes to overseas destinations,
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spreading the virus to Vietnam, Singapore and Canada.
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Flights between Hong Kong, Toronto and other international cities were quickly grounded
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and thanks to other emergency measures,
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a pandemic was averted.
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By the time the outbreak was over four months later,
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SARS had infected 29 countries worldwide
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and more than 1,000 people were dead.
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For all that the virus was rapidly contained, however,
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there was little that could be done about the alarming news reports
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carried by cable news channels and the Internet.
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As bloggers added to the hysteria
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by spreading unfounded conspiracy theories,
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tourism in Hong Kong and other affected cities ground to a halt,
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costing businesses more than 10 billion U.S. dollars.
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One business, however, did very well.
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Above all, SARS was a reminder that pandemics have always been associated with panic.
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If history teaches us anything,
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it's that while pandemics may start small,
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their impacts can be as dramatic as wars and natural disasters.
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The difference today
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is that science gives us the ability to detect pandemics
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right at the very beginning
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and to take action to mitigate their impacts
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before they spread too widely.
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