AIDS at 20

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A 1981 reference to an unusual pneumonia in Los Angeles, California, by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention marked the beginning of public discussion of the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, known as AIDS. More than 350 selected New York Times articles from 1981 to 2001 related to the AIDS epidemic are available on this website. Materials also include nine articles specifically related to the course of the epidemic's devastation in Africa.

There are nine videos, six multimedia presentations, five fact sheets, and four in-depth reports on such subjects as HIV medications, AIDS in New York City, HIV and teens, women and AIDS, the Federal response to the crisis, and the history of AIDS. The in-depth reports cover a diverse range of people affected by AIDS, including those of different ethnic backgrounds, and cover a wide range of locations within the U.S., including rural and urban areas.

Center for Disease Control and Prevention

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The Center for Disease Prevention and Control exists to disperse information and techniques useful to prevent disease, disability, and injury, as well as to promote readiness for potential widespread threats to U.S. citizens' physical wellness.

While, the CDC offers an extensive children's page and education resource collection, the vast majority of the content is geared toward health/physical education and science courses. A select number of resources may prove useful to history teachers.

Did a historical figure suffer a given condition with which you aren't particularly familiar? If so, the CDC has a handy list of condition and disease overviews which will prevent you from being unable to explain its meaning to curious students. Note, though, that if you are reading a historical primary source, you may have to search elsewhere for an explanation, as the site does not include conditions, such as Bright's Disease, which are no longer recognized or have since been divided into several more specific health anomalies.

Other features which may be of use in limited context are children's interactives on the investigation of West Nile Virus and on the history of SARS. The SARS section offers a timeline, the role overviews of central figures in the outbreak, geographical stats, and a question and answer feature concerning basic SARS information. These can be of use for recent history lessons or to help students understand past epidemics by making them consider examples with which they are familiar. Another feature to consider is the public health image library.

Finally, if you or your students need statistics related to physical or mental health, the CDC site includes a data and statistics center.

History of Hidden Killers: Epidemics in America

Quiz Webform ID
22414
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Teaser

Wherever people go, disease is sure to follow. Answer these questions about U.S. epidemics.

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Does the swine flu outbreak have you thinking about epidemics in the past? Match the description of the disease with its name from the pull-down menu. (Each is used once and only once.)

Quiz Answer

1. Yellow Fever. Viral infection transmitted by mosquito bites. Symptoms include fever, pain, nausea, and jaundice induced by liver damage. It was brought to America via the Spanish slave trade through the Caribbean to New Orleans. Epidemics began in 1693, and centered on port cities—especially, after 1822, in the South. An outbreak in 1878 in New Orleans was the last great U.S. epidemic, and a smaller outbreak in 1905 in New Orleans was the last of any magnitude.

2. Measles. Viral disease spread by coughing. Symptoms include fever, conjunctivitis, and a clustered, spotted rash. Endemic in Europe, where it was not ordinarily fatal because the population had a certain degree of resistance. When it made its debut in the Americas, however, where the Native Americans had never been exposed to it, it killed vast swaths of people.

3. Cholera. Bacterial disease transmitted through eating or drinking contaminated food or water. Symptoms develop rapidly and include diarrhea, a drop in blood pressure, and shock. The first epidemic in America happened in 1832, spread from Europe. Other outbreaks continued through the 19th century, such as one spread by gold seekers to California between 1849 through 1855. The last U.S. outbreak happened in New York City in 1910.

4. Typhus. Bacterial disease transmitted from one infected person to another by lice bites. Symptoms include headache, fever, rash, chills, sores, and delirium. Epidemics have typically occurred during times of war and famine, or in widespread unsanitary living conditions, such as those in prisons or camps. In 19th-century America, epidemics of this disease occurred in 1837 in Philadelphia, in various encampments in the Civil War, and in Baltimore, Memphis, and Washington, in the decade after the war.

5. HIV/AIDS. Viral disease that originated in Africa early in the 20th century, but which was not recognized until it became epidemic in the United States early in the 1980s. It is transmitted through contact with an infected person's bodily fluids. The disease weakens the body's immune system and thereby makes it susceptible to infection by other diseases. In the United States, about 1.7 million people have been infected with this disease, and more than 580,000 have died.

6. Influenza. Viral disease that becomes epidemic when new strains are spread from animals, such as birds or pigs, to humans. A pandemic in 1918-1919 killed over 50 million people worldwide, most of them healthy young adults, probably because of overreaction by strong immune systems. In the U.S., over 500,000 died—more than the number of American fatalities in World War I, which occurred at the same time. In many U.S. cities, business came to a halt during the height of the epidemic.

For more information

epidemics-ctlm2.jpg For all things illness, check out the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. From scientific descriptions of disease to an interactive on another recent epidemic (remember SARS?), the CDC provide information more technical and health-related than historical, but may still house some resources of use.

The Philip S. Hench Walter Reed Yellow Fever Collection archives the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission's findings on yellow fever in the early 20th century.

The National Library of Medicine's Medicine in America: 1619-1914 digital library includes a pro-inoculation minister's views on the 1721 Boston smallpox epidemic.

As a recent epidemic, much has been written on AIDS; try the New York Times' AIDS at 20 archive for articles on the rise of AIDS and its study since the 1980s.

An earlier NHEC quiz, on vaccinations, includes further suggestions for health-and-illness-related resources.

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Fort Clark Trading Post State Historic Site [ND]

Description

Fort Clark Trading Post State Historic Site is one of the most important archaeological sites in the state because of its well-preserved record of the fur trade and of personal tragedy. More than 150 years ago, it was the scene of devastating smallpox and cholera epidemics that decimated most of the inhabitants of a Mandan and later an Arikara Indian village. The archaeological remains of the large earthlodge village, cemetery, and two fur trade posts (Fort Clark Trading Post and Primeau's Post) are protected at the site, located one and one-quarter mile west of the town of Fort Clark, Mercer County.

The site is open to the public.

Website does not specify any interpretive services available at the site, beyond signage.

Fort Clark Trading Post State Historic Site

Description

Fort Clark Trading Post State Historic Site is one of the most important archaeological sites in the state because of its well-preserved record of the fur trade and of personal tragedy. More than 150 years ago, it was the scene of devastating smallpox and cholera epidemics that decimated most of the inhabitants of a Mandan and later an Arikara Indian village. The archaeological remains of the large earthlodge village, cemetery, and two fur trade posts (Fort Clark Trading Post and Primeau's Post) are protected at the site, located one and one-quarter mile west of the town of Fort Clark, Mercer County.

Site may not offer any interpretative services beyond a self-guided tour and signage.