“There Wasn't a Lot of Comforts in Those Days:” African Americans, Public Health, and the 1918 Influenza Epidemic

Author:

Gamble Vanessa Northington1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of University Professors, Health Policy, and American Studies at The George Washington University, Washington, DC

Abstract

When the 1918 influenza epidemic began, African American communities were already beset by many public health, medical, and social problems, including racist theories of black biological inferiority, racial barriers in medicine and public health, and poor health status. To address these problems, African Americans mounted efforts such as establishing separate hospitals and professional organizations and repudiating racist scientific theories. Contradicting prevailing theories about African Americans' increased susceptibility to disease, it appears that during the 1918 epidemic the incidence of influenza was lower in African Americans. Although the epidemic had a less devastating impact on African American communities, it still overwhelmed their medical and public health resources. Observations about the lower rates of influenza in African Americans did not derail racist theories about the biological inferiority of black people or overturn conceptualizations of black people as disease threats to white people. When the epidemic ended, the major problems that African Americans faced still remained.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference42 articles.

1. Germs Know No Color Line: Black Health and Public Policy in Atlanta, 1900–1918

2. Du Bois WEB. The health and physique of the Negro American. Atlanta: Atlanta University Press; 1906. p. 76, 89–90.

3. Hoffman FL. Race traits and tendencies of the American Negro. New York: American Economic Association; 1896. p. 5, 311–2.

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