Ebook Download , by Jeremy Brown
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, by Jeremy Brown
Ebook Download , by Jeremy Brown
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Product details
File Size: 4607 KB
Print Length: 273 pages
Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1501181246
Publisher: Touchstone (December 18, 2018)
Publication Date: December 18, 2018
Sold by: Simon and Schuster Digital Sales Inc
Language: English
ASIN: B078M56BNB
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#145,279 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
Jeremy Brown has written an intelligent, engaging and very well-written book about an issue that is both historic and (alarmingly) contemporary. He has a very easy writing style, with occasional irreverently humorous comments. (Little has changed since I taught him in HIgh School some 40 years ago.... the cleverest student I ever had.). Most of all, he has a great curiosity about the world, which shows through clearly in this book, and - a rare, precious quality for a writer - communicates itself to the reader, who is drawn into the topic. If you enjoy medical / scientific/ sociological ‘whodunnits’, you will love this book - a great read, and a great gift!It should be mentioned that he is an amazingly diverse polymath, who glides from arcane subject (Emergency Medicine, Medieval science, the history of ideas, obscure rabbinic texts) to arcane subject. Keep writing, please - the best is yet to come!
A Wellwritten, accessible to non medical people account of the 1918 flu outbreak, along with current theories about the cause and what is being done today in case of another killer pandemic.
Provides a good concise history of the influenza Pandemic of 1918 and ties it into the common issues facing today with clinic. Interesting take on vaccines, antiviral therapy and controversy with the Tamilflu. Good up to date info.
Most people are aware of the epidemic of Spanish flu that killed millions worldwide in 1918. Now a hundred years have passed, and the best information we have, according to research physician Jerry Brown, indicates that we are not much closer to finding a cure for the flu, or predicting and coping with a massive outbreak, than we were a century ago.Beginning with a harrowing story of a modern flu victim to illustrate how devastating “just the flu†can still be, Brown then takes us back to 1918, when two wars were being waged: World War I and the fight against the flu. The latter was especially significant since conditions for the disease’s spread were ideal: the virus needs live cells to do its dirty work, and to find live cells it needs crowds. Those in uniform in crowded barracks were susceptible, along with the poor, crammed into tenements with many family members occupying a tiny space. Add to that the virus’s “shapeshifting†capabilities, which explain why we may get the flu more than once in a season (usually, Brown says, a winter period of low to no sunlight).In 1918, people, including medical providers, relied on ineffective or fatal remedies such as bloodletting, gas inhalation and overdosing on aspirin. A disturbing chart offered by Brown depicts the average life expectancy in 1918 --- around 40 --- as compared to the pre-1918 flu rate of 55 and the gradual rise to 70 by 1960.Yet, as Brown points out, some survive the flu. But despite studies that have included such extremes as digging up the frozen bodies of flu victims in Alaska and elsewhere, little is known about how to stop the virus from jumping off birds and swine and hopping onto people. It still kills about 30,000 Americans each year.Brown, the Director of Emergency Care Research at the National Institutes of Health, avers that there is still no drug that eradicates the virus, and added to the problem are anti-viral drugs that are efficacious at creating controversy, as none seems to work, or to work every year, or in all cases. Brown believes that by forgetting the ravages of the 1918 epidemic, we may be doomed to have a repeat: “Marking its centennial is a step in the right direction, but it’s a very small step.†He’s calling for a 1918 "flu memorial" and hopes that by the time it’s built, “we will also be celebrating a cure.â€Reviewed by Barbara Bamberger Scott
investigation, medical, historical-research, historical-places-events, historical-figures, pandemicI'm not certain who will benefit most from this book. The very beginning could be quite off putting to the general public while paramedicals like me are entranced. Lots of it is easily comprehensible to most, while some sections might make some folks glassy eyed. Yet you ask why I recommend it to everyone.Simple. Historians, research minded, descendants, patients, and those in paramedical fields will benefit from the research and perspectives laid out in this book. Whether you want to know how influenza traveled, why this particular strain is not freely active, how vaccines are developed, what treatments were used throughout history for the illness and if/when some were finally discarded, and just why the grandmothers were right about dosing with chicken soup, you will find your answers here.I had the grandest time reading this one, and I have read a number of others, because of the logical way that sections are organized as well as some areas having a slightly different perspective than some others. I hope that many others will at least learn a lot from it.I requested and received a free ebook copy from Touchstone/Simon and Schuster Publishing via NetGalley. Thank you!
Influenza by Dr. Jeremy Brown2018 is the 100th anniversary of the Influenza pandemic of 1918 that killed 50 to 100 million people worldwide and infected as many as a third of the world’s population. Dr. Brown not only documents the events of 1918 but more importantly explores research and breakthroughs in the field since then. With this added knowledge, he lets the reader ponder whether another pandemic is likely to happen again, and if so, how deadly would it be. Surprisingly, medicine may not have progressed as far as most of us would like to think. Dr. Jeremy Brown, director of Emergency Care Research at the National Institutes of Health, along with his exhaustive research is well qualified to tell us this story.In documenting the history of the disease, “Influenza†covers many interesting stories including the need to recover the bodies of 1918 influenza victims that remained frozen in the Alaskan tundra since their death. Brown also delves into the economic and social impact of flu and today's fight against the virus and the immunizations that remain controversial to this day.Much has been written about the 1918 pandemic but this book goes beyond the story of 1918. It follows the disease for a century and documents our fight against it.
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