Cholera’s Child

Cholera's Child

Talking Epidemics at New York Academy of Medicine

Wonderful event at New York Academy of Medicine last night, with Boston University’s Jonathan Simon, human rights activist and pediatrician Dr Annie Sparrow, conservation medicine expert Dr Jonathan Epstein and Google.org’s humanitarian data expert Pablo Maygrundter. About a hundred folks came out for a presentation and discussion of “Mapping Cholera.” Here’s video ICMYI, and some highlights from Twitter too. Thank you to New York Academy of Medicine’s Lisa O’Sullivan and Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting for organizing. @soniashah mapped the cholera outbreak of1832 in NYC which predated London& John Snow by 20 yrs. @NYAMHistory pic.twitter.com/2iZIowzv0r — Jonathan Epstein (@EpsteinJon) November 4, 2014 A dr stopped me on 5th Ave 2 say yr talk on emerging diseases was “studpendous” @NYAMHistory @Pulitzercenter. Kudos! pic.twitter.com/9pxhEPhhFe — Zachary Child (@ZAndrewChild) November 5, 2014 Jon Simon says @soniashah has courage to offer alternative truths. Speaking on cholera at NYAM @Pulitzercenter pic.twitter.com/VDUJ2JmcDF — Kem Sawyer (@kemsawyer) November 5, 2014 In 1832 Five Points in NYC was probably the most crowded place on earth. #histmed @soniashah pic.twitter.com/ZoET09EamJ — NYAMCenterforHistory (@NYAMHistory) November 4, 2014 @soniashah cholera has caused seven pandemics, the last beginning in Haiti in 2010 and continuing today. — NYAMCenterforHistory (@NYAMHistory) November 4, 2014 @soniashah how does a pathogen become a pandemic? What are the political, economic, and social drivers? @Pulitzercenter #MappingCholera — Camilla Hermann (@CamillaFHermann) November 4, 2014 Haiti cholera likely to continue until substantial infrastructure in place. “A bonfire sending out sparks”. @soniashah — NYAMCenterforHistory (@NYAMHistory) November 4, 2014 Very timely event: mapping cholera +pandemics discussion at NY academy of medicine w @pablomayrgundte @soniashah @EpsteinJon @annie_sparrow — Diana Enriquez (@denrsch) November 4, 2014 Once a disease becomes endemic, whether malaria or pneumonia, it becomes normalized, and gets less attention. @soniashah — NYAMCenterforHistory (@NYAMHistory) November 5, 2014 @soniashah connects the dots btwn 1832 NYC #cholera outbreak & pandemics 2day at @NYAMHistory @Pulitzercenter event pic.twitter.com/93SDeuTKsF — Zachary Child (@ZAndrewChild) November 5, 2014 Thx to the speakers at the Mapping Cholera panel last night! @annie_sparrow, @EpsteinJon, @pablomayrgundte @soniashah pic.twitter.com/xyKFBSBrh3 — NYAMCenterforHistory (@NYAMHistory) November 5, 2014 @soniashah fabulous talk @NYAMHistory – TY! (had Q’s, but no time) Can’t wait to read the book, Elaine — Elaine Schattner (@ElaineSchattner) November 5, 2014

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“Mapping Cholera” in Scientific American and at the New York Academy of Medicine

A few years ago, in connection with research for my new book (Cholera’s Child: Tracking the Next Pandemic), I encountered a collection of physicians’ reports from an 1832 cholera epidemic in New York City. Along with their descriptions of the mysterious disease and outrage at the mayor and city council, who refused to alert the public about the arrival of cholera, the physicians had included in these reports detailed tables, listing every case of cholera that occurred in the city, along with victims’ addresses. One of the many aspects of the 19th century cholera epidemic in New York City that interested me was its striking similarity to the ongoing cholera epidemic in Haiti. The disease had been introduced via novel means (in the case of New York, the newly opened Erie Canal; in Haiti, the arrival of UN peacekeepers from Nepal). New Yorkers, like Haitians, had no immunity to the disease. The islands they lived on had been deforested and were subject to flooding, and their populations lived in crowded, unsanitary conditions. The result: massive numbers of cases and deaths, along with the political instability that follows. I wasn’t sure what could be done with these old New York City addresses. The city’s changed tremendously since then, and most were outdated. But they were so detailed, and they pre-dated John Snow’s famous cholera map of 1854 by a couple decades. Plus, I knew there was a similar data-set available in Haiti. That summer, I’d interviewed Oliver Schulz in Port-au-Prince, where he directed Medecins Sans Frontieres’ cholera treatment centers. He had told me the organization had collected GPS data on all the cases they’d been treating in the country since the beginning of the epidemic in 2010. So I spent a few weeks entering the physicians’ information into a spreadsheet. When I found out that the New York Public Library had recently geocoded historical maps of New York City, I realized that it might be possible that  the two epidemics could be plotted on side-by-side maps. The wonderful Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting stepped in with the funding and expertise to do just that. This October, we launch “Mapping Cholera: A Tale of Two Cities,” an interactive story-map of the two epidemics, on Scientific American magazine’s website. The story-map will be made freely available and easily embeddable on October 11, the fourth anniversary of the cholera epidemic in Haiti. On November 4, 2014, the New York Academy of Medicine is hosting a special event around “Mapping Cholera.” There’ll be a panel discussion with me, Dr. Jonathan Epstein of EcoHealth Alliance, the Pulitzer Center, and Medecins Sans Frontieres, about the story-maps; the past, present, and future of cholera epidemics; and their connection to ongoing epidemics of new disease around the world such as Ebola in West Africa. A light reception follows. That event is free and open to the public, but registration is required. Click here for more info.  

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