Pandemias

The survival of human beings lies in their capacity for socialisation, their life constitutes a constant interdependence with other human beings and all with whom we share this stratum known as the biosphere, our ‘global village’, as the Canadian cultural critic Marshall McLuhan referred to in ‘The...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: ISABEL ABAD MARTÍNEZ, NANCY, AZUCENA ROMERO SACOTO, LILIA, Romero, Margarita, Quezada, Alejandra, Altamirano Cárdenas, Luis Francisco, Gonzales, Fanny, ESTRELLA GONZALEZ, MARIA DE LOS ANGELES, Faican Rocano, Pedro, Gonzalez León, Fanny Mercedes, MINCHALA URGILES, ROSA ELVIRA, Ochoa, Mª del Carmen, MARTINEZ SUAREZ, PEDRO CARLOS, ALEXIS RAMÍREZ CORONEL, ANDRÉS, RODRIGO YAMBAY BAUTISTA, XAVIER
Format: Online
Language:Spanish
Published: Red Editorial Latinoamericana de Investigación Contemporánea 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:ONIX_20241025_9789942713636_142
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1869514648024252416
author ISABEL ABAD MARTÍNEZ, NANCY
AZUCENA ROMERO SACOTO, LILIA
Romero, Margarita
Quezada, Alejandra
Altamirano Cárdenas, Luis Francisco
Gonzales, Fanny
ESTRELLA GONZALEZ, MARIA DE LOS ANGELES
Faican Rocano, Pedro
Gonzalez León, Fanny Mercedes
MINCHALA URGILES, ROSA ELVIRA
Ochoa, Mª del Carmen
MARTINEZ SUAREZ, PEDRO CARLOS
ALEXIS RAMÍREZ CORONEL, ANDRÉS
RODRIGO YAMBAY BAUTISTA, XAVIER
author_browse ALEXIS RAMÍREZ CORONEL, ANDRÉS
AZUCENA ROMERO SACOTO, LILIA
Altamirano Cárdenas, Luis Francisco
ESTRELLA GONZALEZ, MARIA DE LOS ANGELES
Faican Rocano, Pedro
Gonzales, Fanny
Gonzalez León, Fanny Mercedes
ISABEL ABAD MARTÍNEZ, NANCY
MARTINEZ SUAREZ, PEDRO CARLOS
MINCHALA URGILES, ROSA ELVIRA
Ochoa, Mª del Carmen
Quezada, Alejandra
RODRIGO YAMBAY BAUTISTA, XAVIER
Romero, Margarita
author_facet ISABEL ABAD MARTÍNEZ, NANCY
AZUCENA ROMERO SACOTO, LILIA
Romero, Margarita
Quezada, Alejandra
Altamirano Cárdenas, Luis Francisco
Gonzales, Fanny
ESTRELLA GONZALEZ, MARIA DE LOS ANGELES
Faican Rocano, Pedro
Gonzalez León, Fanny Mercedes
MINCHALA URGILES, ROSA ELVIRA
Ochoa, Mª del Carmen
MARTINEZ SUAREZ, PEDRO CARLOS
ALEXIS RAMÍREZ CORONEL, ANDRÉS
RODRIGO YAMBAY BAUTISTA, XAVIER
author_sort ISABEL ABAD MARTÍNEZ, NANCY
collection Directory of Open Access Books
description The survival of human beings lies in their capacity for socialisation, their life constitutes a constant interdependence with other human beings and all with whom we share this stratum known as the biosphere, our ‘global village’, as the Canadian cultural critic Marshall McLuhan referred to in ‘The Gutemberg Galaxy’ (1962). However, this very circumstance entails risks to its health and to life itself. The greeting is part of the ritual, and in it the signs of peace and intimacy emerge, for example in the handshake, the hug and the kiss. Suddenly, these social manifestations were considered as risk factors and were suppressed when, on 30 January 2020, the highest United Nations body responsible for leading and coordinating health actions in the world, the WHO, declared a pandemic situation due to a new pathology christened COVID 19, with the imperious need for confinement and social isolation as health measures to halt the unstoppable onslaught of SARS CoV 2 sighted in Wuhan - Hubei province in China. And so, these displays of fellowship were seen as ‘dangerous transfer mechanisms’ for the new virus, echoing what Nurse Leila Given said in 1929 about the mechanisms of transmission of infectious diseases. History and the development of epidemiology have documented more than a dozen epidemics since ancient times that have plagued humanity, some of which persist to this day, such as tuberculosis, also known as the ‘great white plague’ or ‘phthisis’, found in human remains from the Neolithic period and in Egyptian mummies. These ‘infectious’ agents (bacteria, viruses), have been called the ‘killers of history’, because over time they have taken a merciless toll in human lives, some of the most lethal of which we remember: Smallpox, with approximately 300 million victims; Measles, to which some 200 million deaths are attributed; The erroneously known as Spanish Flu (known to have originated in Kansas in 1918), which claimed between 50 and 100 million human lives in two years of activity; it is also said that the Black Death of the 14th century claimed more than 75 million lives; AIDS, which has been present in our environment for four decades and is currently considered to have caused approximately 40 million deaths; another 40 million on account of Cholera. And now, SARS CoV 2, denounced for disrespecting borders and in just one week having spread to 40 countries, taking advantage of the ticket of globalisation and having killed approximately 6.3 million human beings by May 2022. How can we forget that the arrival of the Europeans in Abya Yala, renamed America, generated 17 epidemics that up to 95% of the aboriginal population in 130 years of colonisation, showing much more effectiveness than the ‘art of war’. We are aware that these phenomena are not new, and that their presence always leaves indelible sequels in the history of humanity, but not only of terror, isolation, destruction and emptiness, but also of changes, discoveries, progress and questioning of our ‘human coexistence’. Just as they have come to be considered ‘confessed culprits’ of demographic catastrophes; participants in the fall of mighty empires and portentous cities, we should not deny their participation in the architectural and urban development of cities; the adoption of new trade routes and cultural changes (thanks to SARS COV 2, in 2020 the online system is firmly established); Also, consider the development of fundamental sanitary measures and the stopping of terrible fratricidal wars (bubonic plague stopped the so-called ‘100 years war’; Spanish flu stopped the 1st world war, the ‘English sweat’ marked the end of the war of the Two Roses). But ‘microbes’ alone are not the generators of these situations, to condemn them would be to deny the holistic interaction of life.****It is almost 350 years since Antonie Van Leeuwhoeck (1674), broke Francesco Redi's theory of ‘spontaneous generation’, by observing for the first time with a primitive microscope those he called ‘small animalcules’, now we know that their existence dates back some 3. They are considered the most remote and multitudinous specimens that coexist on this planet, on land, in water and in the air; that determine the life cycles of all ecosystems; that have a still unimaginable diversity and versatility to adapt to the most extreme environmental changes; and have a surprising capacity to transform matter into vital energy (such as the bacteria that colonise the roots of plants or the roots of animals).Shannon and Chao's indices indicate that ‘healthy microbiota equals good health’.This account of the history of pandemics is intended to remind us how frequent they are, the effects they produce; that collective deaths leave great voids in families and communities, that they generate an atmosphere of pain, anguish, sadness, impotence and desolation, but also, that EVERYTHING PASSES, and that they offer us the possibility of reinventing ourselves and our lives.They offer us the possibility to reinvent ourselves and always reconsider the utopia of the scientist Louis Pasteur: ‘That nations unite with knowledge to save the planet’, to which the phrases of Eduardo Galeano ‘Utopias serve to walk, so let's walk’, in a coexistence with respect.Dr. Luis F. Altamirano CárdenasCoordinator
format Online
id doab-20.500.12854ir-146600
institution Directory of Open Access Books
language spa
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Red Editorial Latinoamericana de Investigación Contemporánea
publisherStr Red Editorial Latinoamericana de Investigación Contemporánea
record_format ojs
spelling doab-20.500.12854ir-1466002024-10-25T11:02:33Z Pandemias ISABEL ABAD MARTÍNEZ, NANCY AZUCENA ROMERO SACOTO, LILIA Romero, Margarita Quezada, Alejandra Altamirano Cárdenas, Luis Francisco Gonzales, Fanny ESTRELLA GONZALEZ, MARIA DE LOS ANGELES Faican Rocano, Pedro Gonzalez León, Fanny Mercedes MINCHALA URGILES, ROSA ELVIRA Ochoa, Mª del Carmen MARTINEZ SUAREZ, PEDRO CARLOS ALEXIS RAMÍREZ CORONEL, ANDRÉS RODRIGO YAMBAY BAUTISTA, XAVIER EVOLUTION HISTORY PANDEMICS thema EDItEUR::M Medicine and Nursing::MJ Clinical and internal medicine::MJC Diseases and disorders::MJCJ Infectious and contagious diseases The survival of human beings lies in their capacity for socialisation, their life constitutes a constant interdependence with other human beings and all with whom we share this stratum known as the biosphere, our ‘global village’, as the Canadian cultural critic Marshall McLuhan referred to in ‘The Gutemberg Galaxy’ (1962). However, this very circumstance entails risks to its health and to life itself. The greeting is part of the ritual, and in it the signs of peace and intimacy emerge, for example in the handshake, the hug and the kiss. Suddenly, these social manifestations were considered as risk factors and were suppressed when, on 30 January 2020, the highest United Nations body responsible for leading and coordinating health actions in the world, the WHO, declared a pandemic situation due to a new pathology christened COVID 19, with the imperious need for confinement and social isolation as health measures to halt the unstoppable onslaught of SARS CoV 2 sighted in Wuhan - Hubei province in China. And so, these displays of fellowship were seen as ‘dangerous transfer mechanisms’ for the new virus, echoing what Nurse Leila Given said in 1929 about the mechanisms of transmission of infectious diseases. History and the development of epidemiology have documented more than a dozen epidemics since ancient times that have plagued humanity, some of which persist to this day, such as tuberculosis, also known as the ‘great white plague’ or ‘phthisis’, found in human remains from the Neolithic period and in Egyptian mummies. These ‘infectious’ agents (bacteria, viruses), have been called the ‘killers of history’, because over time they have taken a merciless toll in human lives, some of the most lethal of which we remember: Smallpox, with approximately 300 million victims; Measles, to which some 200 million deaths are attributed; The erroneously known as Spanish Flu (known to have originated in Kansas in 1918), which claimed between 50 and 100 million human lives in two years of activity; it is also said that the Black Death of the 14th century claimed more than 75 million lives; AIDS, which has been present in our environment for four decades and is currently considered to have caused approximately 40 million deaths; another 40 million on account of Cholera. And now, SARS CoV 2, denounced for disrespecting borders and in just one week having spread to 40 countries, taking advantage of the ticket of globalisation and having killed approximately 6.3 million human beings by May 2022. How can we forget that the arrival of the Europeans in Abya Yala, renamed America, generated 17 epidemics that up to 95% of the aboriginal population in 130 years of colonisation, showing much more effectiveness than the ‘art of war’. We are aware that these phenomena are not new, and that their presence always leaves indelible sequels in the history of humanity, but not only of terror, isolation, destruction and emptiness, but also of changes, discoveries, progress and questioning of our ‘human coexistence’. Just as they have come to be considered ‘confessed culprits’ of demographic catastrophes; participants in the fall of mighty empires and portentous cities, we should not deny their participation in the architectural and urban development of cities; the adoption of new trade routes and cultural changes (thanks to SARS COV 2, in 2020 the online system is firmly established); Also, consider the development of fundamental sanitary measures and the stopping of terrible fratricidal wars (bubonic plague stopped the so-called ‘100 years war’; Spanish flu stopped the 1st world war, the ‘English sweat’ marked the end of the war of the Two Roses). But ‘microbes’ alone are not the generators of these situations, to condemn them would be to deny the holistic interaction of life.****It is almost 350 years since Antonie Van Leeuwhoeck (1674), broke Francesco Redi's theory of ‘spontaneous generation’, by observing for the first time with a primitive microscope those he called ‘small animalcules’, now we know that their existence dates back some 3. They are considered the most remote and multitudinous specimens that coexist on this planet, on land, in water and in the air; that determine the life cycles of all ecosystems; that have a still unimaginable diversity and versatility to adapt to the most extreme environmental changes; and have a surprising capacity to transform matter into vital energy (such as the bacteria that colonise the roots of plants or the roots of animals).Shannon and Chao's indices indicate that ‘healthy microbiota equals good health’.This account of the history of pandemics is intended to remind us how frequent they are, the effects they produce; that collective deaths leave great voids in families and communities, that they generate an atmosphere of pain, anguish, sadness, impotence and desolation, but also, that EVERYTHING PASSES, and that they offer us the possibility of reinventing ourselves and our lives.They offer us the possibility to reinvent ourselves and always reconsider the utopia of the scientist Louis Pasteur: ‘That nations unite with knowledge to save the planet’, to which the phrases of Eduardo Galeano ‘Utopias serve to walk, so let's walk’, in a coexistence with respect.Dr. Luis F. Altamirano CárdenasCoordinator 2024-10-25T11:02:28Z 2024-10-25T11:02:28Z 2023 book ONIX_20241025_9789942713636_142 9789942713636 https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/146600 spa image/jpeg Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International https://redliclibros.com https://redliclibros.com/index.php/publicaciones/catalog/book/15 Red Editorial Latinoamericana de Investigación Contemporánea 10.58995/lb.redlic.15 The survival of human beings lies in their capacity for socialisation, their life constitutes a constant interdependence with other human beings and all with whom we share this stratum known as the biosphere, our ‘global village’, as the Canadian cultural critic Marshall McLuhan referred to in ‘The Gutemberg Galaxy’ (1962). However, this very circumstance entails risks to its health and to life itself. The greeting is part of the ritual, and in it the signs of peace and intimacy emerge, for example in the handshake, the hug and the kiss. Suddenly, these social manifestations were considered as risk factors and were suppressed when, on 30 January 2020, the highest United Nations body responsible for leading and coordinating health actions in the world, the WHO, declared a pandemic situation due to a new pathology christened COVID 19, with the imperious need for confinement and social isolation as health measures to halt the unstoppable onslaught of SARS CoV 2 sighted in Wuhan - Hubei province in China. And so, these displays of fellowship were seen as ‘dangerous transfer mechanisms’ for the new virus, echoing what Nurse Leila Given said in 1929 about the mechanisms of transmission of infectious diseases. History and the development of epidemiology have documented more than a dozen epidemics since ancient times that have plagued humanity, some of which persist to this day, such as tuberculosis, also known as the ‘great white plague’ or ‘phthisis’, found in human remains from the Neolithic period and in Egyptian mummies. These ‘infectious’ agents (bacteria, viruses), have been called the ‘killers of history’, because over time they have taken a merciless toll in human lives, some of the most lethal of which we remember: Smallpox, with approximately 300 million victims; Measles, to which some 200 million deaths are attributed; The erroneously known as Spanish Flu (known to have originated in Kansas in 1918), which claimed between 50 and 100 million human lives in two years of activity; it is also said that the Black Death of the 14th century claimed more than 75 million lives; AIDS, which has been present in our environment for four decades and is currently considered to have caused approximately 40 million deaths; another 40 million on account of Cholera. And now, SARS CoV 2, denounced for disrespecting borders and in just one week having spread to 40 countries, taking advantage of the ticket of globalisation and having killed approximately 6.3 million human beings by May 2022. How can we forget that the arrival of the Europeans in Abya Yala, renamed America, generated 17 epidemics that up to 95% of the aboriginal population in 130 years of colonisation, showing much more effectiveness than the ‘art of war’. We are aware that these phenomena are not new, and that their presence always leaves indelible sequels in the history of humanity, but not only of terror, isolation, destruction and emptiness, but also of changes, discoveries, progress and questioning of our ‘human coexistence’. Just as they have come to be considered ‘confessed culprits’ of demographic catastrophes; participants in the fall of mighty empires and portentous cities, we should not deny their participation in the architectural and urban development of cities; the adoption of new trade routes and cultural changes (thanks to SARS COV 2, in 2020 the online system is firmly established); Also, consider the development of fundamental sanitary measures and the stopping of terrible fratricidal wars (bubonic plague stopped the so-called ‘100 years war’; Spanish flu stopped the 1st world war, the ‘English sweat’ marked the end of the war of the Two Roses). But ‘microbes’ alone are not the generators of these situations, to condemn them would be to deny the holistic interaction of life.****It is almost 350 years since Antonie Van Leeuwhoeck (1674), broke Francesco Redi's theory of ‘spontaneous generation’, by observing for the first time with a primitive microscope those he called ‘small animalcules’, now we know that their existence dates back some 3. They are considered the most remote and multitudinous specimens that coexist on this planet, on land, in water and in the air; that determine the life cycles of all ecosystems; that have a still unimaginable diversity and versatility to adapt to the most extreme environmental changes; and have a surprising capacity to transform matter into vital energy (such as the bacteria that colonise the roots of plants or the roots of animals).Shannon and Chao's indices indicate that ‘healthy microbiota equals good health’.This account of the history of pandemics is intended to remind us how frequent they are, the effects they produce; that collective deaths leave great voids in families and communities, that they generate an atmosphere of pain, anguish, sadness, impotence and desolation, but also, that EVERYTHING PASSES, and that they offer us the possibility of reinventing ourselves and our lives.They offer us the possibility to reinvent ourselves and always reconsider the utopia of the scientist Louis Pasteur: ‘That nations unite with knowledge to save the planet’, to which the phrases of Eduardo Galeano ‘Utopias serve to walk, so let's walk’, in a coexistence with respect.Dr. Luis F. Altamirano CárdenasCoordinator 10.58995/lb.redlic.15 a254ac7f-8165-417e-9a96-23e366ace1b6 9789942713636 open access
spellingShingle EVOLUTION
HISTORY
PANDEMICS
thema EDItEUR::M Medicine and Nursing::MJ Clinical and internal medicine::MJC Diseases and disorders::MJCJ Infectious and contagious diseases
ISABEL ABAD MARTÍNEZ, NANCY
AZUCENA ROMERO SACOTO, LILIA
Romero, Margarita
Quezada, Alejandra
Altamirano Cárdenas, Luis Francisco
Gonzales, Fanny
ESTRELLA GONZALEZ, MARIA DE LOS ANGELES
Faican Rocano, Pedro
Gonzalez León, Fanny Mercedes
MINCHALA URGILES, ROSA ELVIRA
Ochoa, Mª del Carmen
MARTINEZ SUAREZ, PEDRO CARLOS
ALEXIS RAMÍREZ CORONEL, ANDRÉS
RODRIGO YAMBAY BAUTISTA, XAVIER
Pandemias
title Pandemias
title_full Pandemias
title_fullStr Pandemias
title_full_unstemmed Pandemias
title_short Pandemias
title_sort pandemias
topic EVOLUTION
HISTORY
PANDEMICS
thema EDItEUR::M Medicine and Nursing::MJ Clinical and internal medicine::MJC Diseases and disorders::MJCJ Infectious and contagious diseases
topic_facet EVOLUTION
HISTORY
PANDEMICS
thema EDItEUR::M Medicine and Nursing::MJ Clinical and internal medicine::MJC Diseases and disorders::MJCJ Infectious and contagious diseases
url ONIX_20241025_9789942713636_142
work_keys_str_mv AT isabelabadmartineznancy pandemias
AT azucenaromerosacotolilia pandemias
AT romeromargarita pandemias
AT quezadaalejandra pandemias
AT altamiranocardenasluisfrancisco pandemias
AT gonzalesfanny pandemias
AT estrellagonzalezmariadelosangeles pandemias
AT faicanrocanopedro pandemias
AT gonzalezleonfannymercedes pandemias
AT minchalaurgilesrosaelvira pandemias
AT ochoamadelcarmen pandemias
AT martinezsuarezpedrocarlos pandemias
AT alexisramirezcoronelandres pandemias
AT rodrigoyambaybautistaxavier pandemias