Literature DB >> 29181597

From lighthouse to hothouse: hospital hygiene, antibiotics and the evolution of infectious disease, 1950-1990.

Christoph Gradmann1.   

Abstract

Upon entering clinical medicine in the 1940s, antibiotic therapy seemed to complete a transformation of hospitals that originated in the late nineteenth century. Former death sinks had become harbingers of therapeutic progress. Yet this triumph was short-lived. The arrival of pathologies caused by resistant bacteria, and of nosocomial infections whose spread was helped by antibiotic therapies, seemed to be intimately related to modern anti-infective therapy. The place where such problems culminated were hospitals, which increasingly appeared as dangerous environments where attempts to combat infectious diseases had instead created hothouses of disease evolution. This paper will focus on one aspect of that history. It caused clinical medicine and hospital hygiene in particular to pay attention to a dimension of infectious disease it had previously paid little attention to thus far: The evolution of infectious disease-previously a matter of mostly theoretical interest-came to be useful in explaining many phenomena observed. This did not turn hospital hygienists into geneticists, though it did give them an awareness that the evolution of infectious disease in a broad sense was something that did matter to them. The paper advances its argument by looking at three phases: The growing awareness of the hospital as a dangerous environment in the 1950s, comprehensive attempts at improving antibiotic therapy and hospital hygiene that followed from the 1960s and lastly the framing of such challenges as risk factors from the 1970s. In conclusion, I will argue that hospital hygiene, being inspired in particular by epidemiology and risk factor analysis, discussed its own specific version of disease emergence and therefore contributed to the 1980s debates around such topics. Being loosely connected to more specialized studies, it consisted of a re-interpretation of infectious disease centred around the temporality of such phenomena as they were encountered in day-to-day dealings of clinical wards.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Antibiotics resistance; Disease evolution; Epidemiology; Hospital infections; Medical microbiology; Risk factors

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29181597     DOI: 10.1007/s40656-017-0176-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hist Philos Life Sci        ISSN: 0391-9714            Impact factor:   1.205


  7 in total

1.  Current accounts of antimicrobial resistance: stabilisation, individualisation and antibiotics as infrastructure.

Authors:  Clare I R Chandler
Journal:  Palgrave Commun       Date:  2019-05-21

2.  A Biohistorical Perspective of Typhoid and Antimicrobial Resistance.

Authors:  Claas Kirchhelle; Zoe Anne Dyson; Gordon Dougan
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2019-10-15       Impact factor: 9.079

3.  Waves of attention: patterns and themes of international antimicrobial resistance reports, 1945-2020.

Authors:  Kristen Overton; Nicolas Fortané; Alex Broom; Stephanie Raymond; Christoph Gradmann; Ebiowei Samuel F Orubu; Scott H Podolsky; Susan Rogers Van Katwyk; Muhammad H Zaman; Claas Kirchhelle
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2021-11

4.  Wars and sweets: microbes, medicines and other moderns in and beyond the(ir) antibiotic era.

Authors:  Coll Hutchison
Journal:  Med Humanit       Date:  2022-08-10

5.  Reconciling Pasteur and Darwin to control infectious diseases.

Authors:  Samuel Alizon; Pierre-Olivier Méthot
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2018-01-18       Impact factor: 8.029

Review 6.  Setting the standard: multidisciplinary hallmarks for structural, equitable and tracked antibiotic policy.

Authors:  Claas Kirchhelle; Paul Atkinson; Alex Broom; Komatra Chuengsatiansup; Jorge Pinto Ferreira; Nicolas Fortané; Isabel Frost; Christoph Gradmann; Stephen Hinchliffe; Steven J Hoffman; Javier Lezaun; Susan Nayiga; Kevin Outterson; Scott H Podolsky; Stephanie Raymond; Adam P Roberts; Andrew C Singer; Anthony D So; Luechai Sringernyuang; Elizabeth Tayler; Susan Rogers Van Katwyk; Clare I R Chandler
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2020-09

7.  Changes in the Framing of Antimicrobial Resistance in Print Media in Australia and the United Kingdom (2011-2020): A Comparative Qualitative Content and Trends Analysis.

Authors:  Chris Degeling; Victoria Brookes; Tarant Hill; Julie Hall; Anastacia Rowles; Cassandra Tull; Judy Mullan; Mitchell Byrne; Nina Reynolds; Olivia Hawkins
Journal:  Antibiotics (Basel)       Date:  2021-11-23
  7 in total

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