Sex in Relation to Society
1820. In the following two years it devastated the Chinese Empire and
5804 words | Chapter 42
invaded Japan, appearing at the port of Nagasaki in 1822. It advanced
into Asiatic Russia, and appeared as far east as St. Petersburg in
1830, from whence it spread north to Finland. In 1831 it passed through
Germany, invading France and the western borders of Europe, entering
the British Isles in 1832, and crossing the Atlantic Ocean for the
first time, appeared in Canada, having been carried thence by some
Irish emigrants.
From Canada it directly made its way to the United States by way of
Detroit. In the same year (1832) it appeared in New York and rapidly
spread along the Atlantic coast.
"During the winter of 1832 it appeared at New Orleans, and passed
thence up the Mississippi Valley. Extending into the Indian country,
causing sad havoc among the aborigines, it advanced westward until its
further progress was stayed by the shores of the Pacific Ocean. In 1834
it reappeared on the east coast of the United States, but did not gain
much headway, and in the following year New Orleans was again invaded
by way of Cuba. It was again imported into Mexico in 1833. In 1835 it
appeared for the first time in South America, being restricted,
however, to a mild epidemic on the Guiana coast.
"In 1846 the disease again advanced beyond its natural confines,
reaching Europe by way of Turkey, in 1848. In the autumn of this year
it also appeared in Great Britain, Belgium, the Netherlands, Sweden,
and the United States, entering by way of New York and New Orleans. In
the succeeding two years the entire extent of country east of the Rocky
Mountains was invaded. During 1851 and 1852 the disease was frequently
imported by emigrants, who were annually arriving in great numbers from
the various infected countries of Europe. In 1853 and 1854 cholera
again prevailed extensively in this country, being, however, traceable
to renewed importation of infected material from abroad. In the
following two years it also broke out in numerous South American
States, where it prevailed at intervals until 1863. Hardly had this
third great pandemic come to an end before the disease again advanced
from the Ganges, spreading throughout India, and extending to China,
Japan, and the East Indian Archipelago, during the years 1863 to 1865.
In the latter year it reached Europe by way of Malta and Marseilles. It
rapidly spread over the Continent, and in 1866 was imported into this
country by way of Halifax, New York, and New Orleans. This epidemic
prevailed extensively in the Western States, but produced only slight
ravages on the Atlantic Coast, being kept in check by appropriate
sanitary measures. In the same year (1866) the disease was also carried
to South America, and invaded for the first time the states bordering
on the Rio de la Plata and the Pacific coast of the Continent.
"Cholera never entirely disappeared in Russia during the latter half of
the sixth decade, and in 1870 it again broke out with violence,
carrying off a quarter of a million of the inhabitants before dying out
in 1873. It spread from Russia into Germany and France and was
imported, in 1873, into this country, entering by way of New Orleans
and extending up the Mississippi Valley. None of the Atlantic coast
cities suffered from this epidemic in 1873, and since that year the
United States has been entirely free from the disease, with the
exception of a few imported cases in New York harbor in 1887" (and in
1893). In 1883 an epidemic of cholera raged in Egypt and spread to many
of the Mediterranean ports, and reappeared in 1885 with renewed
violence. In Spain alone during this latter epidemic the total number
of cases was over one-third of a million, with nearly 120,000 deaths.
In 1886 cholera caused at least 100,000 deaths in Japan. In the latter
part of 1886 cholera was carried from Genoa to Buenos Ayres, and
crossing the Andean range invaded the Pacific coast for a second time.
In Chili alone there were over 10,000 deaths from cholera in the first
six months of 1887. Since then the entire Western hemisphere has been
virtually free from the disease.
In 1889 there was an epidemic of cholera in the Orient; and in 1892 and
1893 it broke out along the shores of the Mediterranean, invading all
the lines of commerce of Europe, Hamburg in the North and Marseilles in
the South being especially affected. In the summer of 1893 a few cases
appeared in New York Bay and several in New York city, but rigorous
quarantine methods prevented any further spread.
Typhus fever is now a rare disease, and epidemics are quite infrequent.
It has long been known under the names of hospital-fever,
spotted-fever, jail-fever, camp-fever, and ship-fever, and has been the
regular associate of such social disturbances as overcrowding,
excesses, famine, and war. For the past eight centuries epidemics of
typhus have from time to time been noticed, but invariably can be
traced to some social derangement.
Yellow Fever is a disease prevailing endemically in the West Indies and
certain sections of what was formerly known as the Spanish Main.
Guiteras recognizes three areas of infection:--
(1) The focal zone from which the disease is never absent, including
Havana, Vera Cruz, Rio, and the other various Spanish-American points.
(2) The perifocal zone, or regions of periodic epidemics, including the
ports of the tropical Atlantic and Africa.
(3) The zone of accidental epidemics, between the parallels of 45
degrees north and 35 degrees south latitude.
In the seventeenth century Guadaloupe, Dominica, Martinique, and
Barbadoes suffered from epidemics of yellow fever. After the first half
of the seventeenth century the disease was prevalent all through the
West Indies. It first appeared in the United States at the principal
ports of Boston, Philadelphia, and Charleston, in 1693, and in 1699 it
reappeared in Philadelphia and Charleston, and since that time many
invasions have occurred, chiefly in the Southern States.
The epidemic of 1793 in Philadelphia, so graphically described by
Matthew Carey, was, according to Osler, the most serious that has ever
prevailed in any city of the Middle States. Although the population of
the city was only 40,000, during the months of August, September,
October, and November the mortality, as given by Carey, was 4041, of
whom 3435 died in the months of September and October. During the
following ten years epidemics of a lesser degree occurred along the
coast of the United States, and in 1853 the disease raged throughout
the Southern States, there being a mortality in New Orleans alone of
nearly 8000. In the epidemic of 1878 in the Southern States the
mortality was nearly 16,000. South America was invaded for the first
time in 1740, and since 1849 the disease has been endemic in Brazil.
Peru and the Argentine Republic have also received severe visitations
of yellow fever since 1854. In Cuba the disease is epidemic during
June, July, and August, and it appears with such certainty that the
Revolutionists at the present time count more on the agency of yellow
fever in the destruction of the unacclimated Spanish soldiers than on
their own efforts.
Leprosy is distinctly a malady of Oriental origin, and existed in
prehistoric times in Egypt and Judea. It was supposed to have been
brought into Europe by a Roman army commanded by Pompey, after an
expedition into Palestine. Leprosy was mentioned by several authors in
the Christian era. France was invaded about the second century, and
from that time on to the Crusades the disease gradually increased. At
this epoch, the number of lepers or ladres becoming so large, they were
obliged to confine themselves to certain portions of the country, and
they took for their patron St. Lazare, and small hospitals were built
and dedicated to this saint. Under Louis VIII 2000 of these hospitals
were counted, and later, according to Dupony, there were 19,000 in the
French kingdom. Various laws and regulations were made to prevent the
spread of the contagion. In 1540 it was said that there were as many as
660 lepers in one hospital in Paris.
No mention is made in the Hippocratic writings of elephantiasis
graecorum, which was really a type of leprosy, and is now considered
synonymous with it. According to Rayer, some writers insist that the
affection then existed under the name of the Phoenician disease. Before
the time of Celsus, the poet Lucretius first speaks of elephantiasis
graecorum, and assigns Egypt as the country where it occurs. Celsus
gives the principal characteristics, and adds that the disease is
scarcely known in Italy, but is very common in certain other countries.
Galen supplies us with several particular but imperfect
cases--histories of elephantiasis graecorum, with a view to demonstrate
the value of the flesh of the viper, and in another review he adds that
the disease is common in Alexandria. Aretaeus has left a very accurate
picture of the symptoms of elephantiasis graecorum; and Pliny
recapitulates the principal features and tells us that the disease is
indigenous in Egypt. The opinion of the contagiousness of elephantiasis
graecorum which we find announced in Herodotus and Galen is more
strongly insisted upon by Caelius Aurelianus who recommends isolation
of those affected. Paulus aegenita discusses the disease. The Arabian
writers have described elephantiasis graecorum under the name of juzam,
which their translators have rendered by the word lepra. Later,
Hensler, Fernel Pare, Vesalius, Horstius, Forestus, and others have
discussed it.
The statistics of leprosy in Europe pale before the numbers affected in
the East. The extent of its former ravages is unknown, but it is
estimated that at the present day there are over 250,000 lepers in
India, and the number in China is possibly beyond computation.
According to Morrow, in 1889 in the Sandwich Islands there were 1100
lepers in the settlement at Molokai. Berger states that there were 100
cases at Key West; and Blanc found 40 cases at New Orleans. Cases of
leprosy are not infrequently found among the Chinese on the Pacific
coast, and an occasional case is seen in the large cities of this
country. At the present day in Europe, where leprosy was once so well
known, it is never found except in Norway and the far East.
Possibly few diseases have caused so much misery and suffering as
leprosy. The banishment from all friends and relatives, the
confiscation of property and seclusion from the world, coupled with
poverty and brutality of treatment,--all emphasize its physical horror
a thousandfold. As to the leper himself, no more graphic description
can be given than that printed in The Ninteenth Century, August, 1884:
"But leprosy! Were I to describe it no one would follow me. More cruel
than the clumsy torturing weapons of old, it distorts, and scars, and
hacks, and maims, and destroys its victim inch by inch, feature by
feature, member by member, joint by joint, sense by sense, leaving him
to cumber the earth and tell the horrid tale of a living death, till
there is nothing left of him. Eyes, voice, nose, toes, fingers, feet,
hands, one after the other are slowly deformed and rot away, until at
the end of ten, fifteen, twenty years, it may be, the wretched leper,
afflicted in every sense himself, and hateful to the sight, smell,
hearing, and touch of others, dies, despised and the most abject of
men."
Syphilis.--Heretofore the best evidence has seemed to prove that
syphilis had its origin in 1494, during the siege of Naples by Charles
VIII of France; but in later days many investigators, prominent among
them Buret, have stated that there is distinct evidence of the
existence of syphilis in prehistoric times. Buret finds evidence of
traces of syphilis among the Chinese five thousand years ago, among the
Egyptians at the time of the Pharaohs, among the Hebrews and Hindoos in
biblic times, and among the Greeks and Romans after Christ. Some
American writers claim to have found evidences of syphilitic disease in
the skulls and other bones of the prehistoric Indian mounds, thus
giving further evidence to the advocates of the American origin of
syphilis. The Spaniards claimed that, returning from America in 1493,
Columbus brought with him syphilis. Friend says: "One thing is
remarkable; the Spaniards, upon their first expedition to America,
brought home from thence this contagious disorder, and soon after
carried another affection thither, the small-pox, of which the Indian
Prince Montezuma died." The first descriptions of syphilis are given
under the name of morbus gallicus, while the French in return called it
morbus neapolitanus or mal d'Italie. The name of syphilis was said to
have been first given to it by a physician of Verona, in a poem
describing the disease. Inspired by heroic epics Fracastor places
before us the divinities of paganism, and supposes that a shepherd,
whom he called Syphilus, had addressed words offensive to Apollo, and
had deserted his altars. To punish him the God sent him a disease of
the genitals, which the inhabitants of the country called the disease
of Syphilus.
"Syphilidemque ab eo labem dixere coloni."
Buret traces the origin of the word syphilis from sun, with, and filia,
love, the companion of love; which means in plain language that the pox
is a disease transmitted more especially by venereal relations. The
first great epidemic of syphilis occurred between 1493 and 1496, and
attacked all ranks, neither the Church nor the Crown being spared. The
ravages of this disease were increased by the treatment with mercury
which soon afterward was found in proper doses to be a specific in this
disease. It is possible that the terrible manifestations of syphilis of
which we read in the older writers were in a great measure due to the
enormous doses of mercury. At the present day syphilis is universally
prevalent. In his excellent monograph Sturgis estimated in New York, in
1873, that one out of 18 suffered from it; and White of Philadelphia
pronounces the opinion that "not less than 50,000 people in that city
are affected with syphilis." According to Rohe, on this basis Gihon
estimates the number of syphilitics in the United States at one time as
2,000,000.
To-day no disease, except possibly tuberculosis, is a greater agency in
augmenting the general mortality and furthering sickness than syphilis.
Its hereditary features, the numerous ways in which it may be
communicated outside of the performance of the sexual act, and the
careful way in which it is kept from the sanitary authorities render it
a scourge which, at the present day, we seem to have no method of
successfully repressing.
Modern Mortality from Infectious Diseases.--As to the direct influence
on the mortality of the most common infectious diseases of the present
day, tuberculosis, universally prevalent, is invariably in the lead. No
race or geographic situation is exempt from it. Osler mentions that in
the Blood Indian Reserve of the Canadian Northwest Territories, during
six years, among a population of about 2000 there were 127 deaths from
pulmonary consumption. This enormous death-rate, it is to be
remembered, occurred in a tribe occupying one of the finest climates of
the world, among the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, a region in
which consumption is extremely rare among the white population, and in
which cases of tuberculosis from the Eastern provinces do remarkably
well. Mayo-Smith quotes a table illustrating the annual deaths (based
on the returns from 1887 to 1891) from certain infectious diseases per
10,000 European inhabitants. The figures for each disease give a rough
measure of its prevalence in different countries. The large figures as
to small-pox show the absence in Italy and "Hieronymi Fracastorii,"
Veronae, 1530. Statistics and Sociology, New York, 1885.
Austria of vaccination; diphtheria seems to be very fatal in Germany
and Austria; Italy has a large rate for typhoid fever, and the same is
true of the other fevers; France, Germany, and Austria show a very
large rate for tuberculosis, while Italy has a small rate.
DEATHS FROM CERTAIN DISEASES PER 10,000 INHABITANTS.
Small- Scarlet Diphtheria Typhoid Tuber-
COUNTRY. pox. Measles. fever fever. culosis
Italy, . . . . . 3.86 6.17 2.99 6.08 7.49 13.61
France (cities). 2.3 5.18 3.1 6.66 5.32 33.
England, . . . . 0.11 4.68 2.31 1.74 1.9 16.09
Ireland, . . . . 0.01 2.01 1.22 0.76 2.33 21.15
Germany (cities). 0.04 2.8 2.15 10.21 2.11 31.29
Prussia, . . . . 0.03 3.2 2.46 14.17 2.26 28.06
Austria, . . . . 4.43 5.36 5.57 13.2 5.42 37.2
Switzerland, . . 0.06 1.53 1.22 3.53 1.47 21.07
Belgium, . . . . 1.52 6.2 1.62 5.77 3.83 19.87
Holland, . . . . 0.02 3.93 0.38 1.45 2.5 19.21
Sweden, . . . . . 0.01 2.3 3.69 3.89 2.22 0.
Based upon the Tenth Census Reports, we figure that of every 10,000
inhabitants of the United States the number of deaths for the census
year from similar diseases was as follows:--
Rural. Cities.
Measles, . . . . . . . 1.62 1.54
Scarlet Fever, . . . . 2.84 5.54
Diphtheria, . . . . . 7.53 8.
Croup, . . . . . . . . 3.51 4.08
Typhoid Fever, . . . . 4.75 3.46
Tuberculosis, . . . . 16.29 28.55
The general average of deaths from small-pox was about 0.14.
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