Abstract
Despite its long history, plague has not been an internationally significant
disease since the mid-twentieth century, and it has attracted minimal modern
critical attention. Strategies for treating plague are generally outdated and of
limited effectiveness. However, plague remains endemic to a few developing
nations, most prominently Madagascar. The outbreak of a major plague epidemic
across several Madagascan urban areas in 2017 has sparked a wider discourse
about the necessity of improving global preparedness for a potential future
plague pandemic. Beyond updating treatment modalities, a key aspect of improving
preparedness for such a pandemic involves a process of sophisticated review of
historical public health responses to plague epidemics. As part of this process,
this article outlines and compares public health responses to three separate
epidemics from the early modern era onwards: Marseille in 1720–22, San
Francisco in 1900–04 and Madagascar in 2017. Based on this process, it
identifies three key themes common to successful responses: (1) clear, effective
and minimally bureaucratic public health protocols; (2) an emphasis on combating
plague denialism by gaining the trust and cooperation of the affected
population; and (3) the long-term suppression of plague through the minimisation
of contact between humans and infected small mammals.
Publisher
Manchester University Press
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