History in a Crisis — Lessons for Covid-19
Authors
Abstract:
Writing in the heady days of new antibiotics and immunizations, esteemed microbiologists Macfarlane Burnet and David White predicted in 1972 that “the most likely forecast about the future of infectious diseases is that it will be very dull.” When asked to explain past events, historians are quick to assert the importance of context. If you want to understand how or why something happened, you must attend to local circumstances. But there is something about epidemics that has elicited an opposite reaction from historians: a desire to identify universal truths about how societies respond to contagious disease. Epidemics unfold as social dramas in three acts, according to Rosenberg. Disclosure forms provided by the author are available at NEJM.org.
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Journal title
volume 3 issue 6
pages 164- 167
publication date 2020-02
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