| Literature DB >> 16707055 |
Paul M V Martin1, Estelle Martin-Granel.
Abstract
The term epidemic (from the Greek epi [on] plus demos [people]), first used by Homer, took its medical meaning when Hippocrates used it as the title of one of his famous treatises. At that time, epidemic was the name given to a collection of clinical syndromes, such as coughs or diarrheas, occurring and propagating in a given period at a given location. Over centuries, the form and meaning of the term have changed. Successive epidemics of plague in the Middle Ages contributed to the definition of an epidemic as the propagation of a single, well-defined disease. The meaning of the term continued to evolve in the 19th-century era of microbiology. Its most recent semantic evolution dates from the last quarter of the 20th century, and this evolution is likely to continue in the future.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16707055 PMCID: PMC3373038 DOI: 10.3201/eid1206.051263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Semantic evolution of the term epidemic
| Stage in evolution | Meaning | Use |
|---|---|---|
| Greek: | Who is in his country | Nonmedical use |
| Greek: Sophocles and Hippocrates (second half of the 5th century BC) | That which circulates and propagates in a country | First medical use |
| Greek: | Sometimes spreading "on the people" | Epidemic of diarrhea |
| Medieval French: | Large number of cases of unique, well-characterized disease | Epidemic of cholera |
| 19th century: | Epidemics caused by a microbe belonging to a given genus and species | Epidemic of cholera due to |
| End of 20th century | Clonal expansion of an epidemic strain, as defined with molecular markers | An epidemic due to |