Article ID: CBB001252056

“A Most Protean Disease”: Aligning Medical Knowledge of Modern Influenza, 1890--1914 (2012)

unapi

This article reconstructs the process of defining influenza as an infectious disease in the contexts of British medicine between 1890 and 1914. It shows how professional agreement on its nature and identity involved aligning different forms of knowledge produced in the field (public health), in the clinic (metropolitan hospitals) and in the laboratory (bacteriology). Two factors were crucial to this process: increasing trust in bacteriology and the organisation of large-scale collective investigations into influenza by Britain's central public authority, the Medical Department of the Local Government Board. These investigations integrated epidemiological, clinical and bacteriological evidence into a new definition of influenza as a specific infection, in which a germ -- Bacillus influenzae -- was determined as playing a necessary but not sufficient role in its aetiology, transmission and pathogenesis. In defining `modern influenza', bacteriological concepts and techniques were adapted to and selectively incorporated into existing clinical, pathological and epidemiological approaches. Mutual alignment thus was crucial to its construction and, more generally, to shaping developing relationships between laboratory, clinical and public health medicine in turn-of-the-century Britain. While these relationships were marked by tension and conflict, they were also characterised by important patterns of convergence, in which the problems, interests and practices of public health professionals, clinicians and laboratory pathologists were made increasingly commensurable. Rather than retrospectively judge the late nineteenth-century definition of influenza as being based on the wrong microbe, this article argues for the need to examine how it was established through a particular alignment of medical knowledge, which then underpinned medical approaches to the disease up to and beyond the devastating 1918--19 pandemic.

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Authors & Contributors
Polu, Sandhya Lakshmi
Milne, Ida
Jahn, Stefanie
Steere-Williams, Jacob
Reuter, Shelley Zipora
McCrea, Heather L.
Journals
Social History of Medicine
Public Understanding of Science
Medizin, Gesellschaft, und Geschichte
Journal of World History
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
História, Ciências, Saúde---Manguinhos
Publishers
Syracuse University
University of Toronto Press
University of New Mexico Press
University of Minnesota Press
University of Massachusetts Press
Routledge
Concepts
Disease and diseases
Medicine and government
Public health
Influenza
Epidemics
Medicine
People
Wallace, Alfred Russel
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
Places
Great Britain
India
New Brunswick (Canada)
United States
Russia
Portugal
Institutions
Ireland. Local Government Board
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