This episode is so good that we’re putting it out a full day early. Pour yourself a quarantini and cozy up with us as we tell you a story of a bacterium that slowly strangles children to death, a scientific quest that helped shape the understanding of infectious diseases, and a great dog sled race across wild and frozen lands to stop death in its tracks. The main character of this story is, you guessed it, Diphtheria. This dreaded disease still lingers, infecting children throughout the world today with its stinking pseudomembrane. But don’t worry, it’s not all bad news… we have a vaccine.
History | Biology |
Salisbury, Gay, and Laney Salisbury. The cruelest miles: the heroic story of dogs and men in a race against an epidemic. WW Norton & Company, 2003. | CDC, “The Pink Book: Diphtheria”. November 19. 2015 |
The Cambridge World History of Human Disease edited by Kenneth F. Kiple | WHO, “Global and regional immunization profile” Sept 21. 2018 |
Hardy, Anne, Thomas Hardy, and Hart Hardy. The epidemic streets: infectious disease and the rise of preventive medicine, 1856-1900. Oxford University Press, 1993. | CDC, “The Pink Book: Appendix E- reported cases and deaths from vaccine preventable diseases, US” March 2018 |
Haddix, Margaret Peterson. Running out of time. Simon and Schuster, 1995. | |
English, Peter C. “Diphtheria and theories of infectious disease: centennial appreciation of the critical role of diphtheria in the history of medicine.” Pediatrics 76.1 (1985): 1-9. |
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