Historical Events tagged with "epidemiology"

Turns out history loves a label—battles, breakthroughs, and the occasional disaster, all neatly tagged for your browsing pleasure. Because sometimes you just need every weird invention in one place.

Health & Medicine

First Confirmed Case of COVID-19 in China

December 8th, 2019 5 years ago

The first confirmed case of COVID-19 occurred in Wuhan, China, marking the onset of an unprecedented global health crisis. Documented in early December 2019, a patient exhibiting pneumonia-like symptoms was identified. This individual had a history of exposure to the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, which was later linked to many early infections. The discovery initially prompted investigations into the cause of the illness, which was later identified as a novel coronavirus, leading to significant public health concerns.

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Health & Medicine

Wuhan Experiences Initial Coronavirus Outbreak

December 1st, 2019 5 years ago

In December 2019, a cluster of pneumonia cases in Wuhan, China, raised concerns among health authorities. Following reports from local hospitals about patients suffering from severe respiratory illness, investigations led to the identification of a new type of coronavirus. The Wuhan Municipal Health Committee reported numerous cases linked to a seafood market, prompting rapid responses from the World Health Organization and local health departments to understand and contain the outbreak.

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Health & Medicine

VSV-EBOV Vaccine Shows High Effectiveness Against Ebola

December 22nd, 2016 8 years ago

A study demonstrated that the VSV-EBOV vaccine is 70-100% effective against the Ebola virus. Conducted in the Republic of Guinea during an outbreak, the research assessed the vaccine's ability to prevent the disease among individuals at risk. This marked a significant breakthrough in combatting the Ebola epidemic and provided the world with its first proven vaccine against the virus, offering hope for future outbreak responses.

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Health & Medicine

Typhoid Mary Quarantined for Life

March 27th, 1915 110 years ago

Mary Mallon, known as Typhoid Mary, was quarantined for the second time due to her status as a healthy carrier of typhoid fever. Authorities sought to control the spread of the disease she unknowingly transmitted to others through her cooking. This time, Mary would remain in isolation for the rest of her life, highlighting the challenges in public health and the stigma faced by carriers of infectious diseases.

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